NASA mission spots Chinese spacecraft on far side of the moon (Image Credit: Mashable)
Now, it’s captured a view of China’s most recent moon landing.
The China National Space Administration landed its robotic Chang’e-6 mission in the expansive South Pole-Aitken Basin in early June. A week later, on June 7, the NASA Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter passed over and captured footage of the uncrewed lander, along with eroded terrain created by thrusters fired into the chalky ground. It’s the second time China has landed on the moon’s far side.
The first image below shows the Chang’e-6 spacecraft at center. NASA noted that it landed in a “mare unit,” meaning it settled down on an ancient lava flow that now appears as a dark-colored rocky plain. Below this new image is a before-and-after look at this region prior to the Chinese craft touching down. The Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter, which has orbited the moon since 2009, is constantly capturing detailed views of our natural satellite, including craters left by a wayward rocket that slammed into the surface.
Credit: NASA / GSFC / Arizona State University
Our Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter spotted China’s Chang’e 6 lander on the rim of an eroded, 50-meter crater within the Moon’s Apollo basin. Chang’e 6 landed on the far side of the Moon on June 1st and LRO captured the image of the lander on June 7. https://t.co/d3Mmi2ad3D pic.twitter.com/YhKuwzS7VE
— NASA Moon (@NASAMoon) June 14, 2024
“The Chang’e-6 mission is the first human sampling and return mission from the far side of the moon,” the China National Space Administration said in a statement. “It involves many engineering innovations, high risks, and great difficulty.”
The 21st century space race is indeed underway. China has ambitious plans to land humans on the lunar surface by 2030.
NASA has famously landed six crewed missions on the moon — but over a half-century ago. It aims to soon return. The space agency’s looming Artemis 3 mission is currently slated to land in September 2026. Unlike the Apollo missions, this time astronauts will venture to the moon’s south pole, where scientists suspect water is preserved in ancient, shadowy craters. The ice will be an invaluable resource — for air, water, and the production of rocket fuel.
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