When we saw this 30 September front page of Dongguan Times, a Chinese newspaper published in Guangzhou, our hunch was that this is the picture of a spaceship that the People's Republic of China is just about to launch. We were right; the 02 October issue of the same paper confirmed it with a picture taken at blast-off.
This was a lunar probe called Chang'e-2 mounted on top a launch vehicle called Long March 3-C.
The launching was on 01 October, which is numerically 011010 (ddmmyy) or 100110 (mmddyy) or 101001 (yymmdd). We're wondering why China did not set it later to 101010, or October 10, 2010. Do we read something feng shui here?
Since we can't read the bold headlines in Chinese characters, we had to go to the China Daily, which in English, for details.
The story written by Xin Dingding was also amply illustrated, one of them included here. Xin tells us that this launch is part of the preparation for an unmanned moon landing in 2013, amplifying this with an account of China's space program in the coming years.
China's moon goal on schedule
By Xin Dingding (China Daily)
Updated: 2010-10-02 07:18
XICHANG, Sichuan - China moved closer to its goal of landing on the moon as its second lunar probe, Chang'e-2, blasted off seconds before 7:00 pm on Friday from the southwestern city of Xichang.
XICHANG, Sichuan - China moved closer to its goal of landing on the moon as its second lunar probe, Chang'e-2, blasted off seconds before 7:00 pm on Friday from the southwestern city of Xichang.
A Long March 3-C launch vehicle, with Chang'e-2 on top, lifted off from the Xichang Satellite Launch Center in Sichuan province at 6:59:57 pm as planned.
The circumlunar satellite separated from the rocket at 7:26 pm to enter the Earth-moon transfer orbit. In less than five days, it will enter a 100-kilometer lunar orbit.
About an hour after the launch, Li Shangfu, director of the Xichang launch center, declared the launch a success to cheers and applause in the command and control hall.
The Chang'e-2 mission is considered "a starting point" of the second stage of China's lunar exploration program that focuses on landing on the moon, a spokesperson for the lunar exploration program, said.
The probe plans to test technology in preparation for an unmanned moon landing in 2013.
Developed with indigenous technology, the 900-million-yuan ($134 million) Chang'e-2 mission will test key components for a soft-landing on the moon.
Friday's mission marked the first time that a Chinese lunar probe directly entered the Earth-moon transfer orbit without orbiting the earth first.
"It is a major breakthrough in rocket design, as it saves energy used by the satellite and speeds up the journey to lunar orbit," Pang Zhihao, a researcher with the China Academy of Space Technology, was quoted by the Xinhua News Agency as saying.
The circumlunar satellite will be sent directly into the Earth-moon transfer orbit and travel some 112 hours before being captured by the moon's gravity and entering the 100-km lunar orbit.
Source: China Daily (02 Oct 201 |
At that distance, it will take high-resolution photos of the moon's Bay of Rainbows area, the expected landing site of Chang'e-3.
"Once the Chang'e-2 probe relays back high-resolution photos of the Bay of Rainbows, taken from the 15-km orbit, it signals a successful mission," the spokesman said.
In addition, it will also refine scientific research results acquired in the first mission through the improved payload on board.
Whether the probe can enter and work in the 15-km orbit is regarded as the biggest challenge facing the country's ground tracking and control technology.
Yu Dengyun, deputy chief designer of China's lunar exploration program, said if the ground-tracking system fails to calculate correctly, during the probe's maneuver, it could either end in a lower orbit and crash into the moon, or take photos in a higher orbit with the quality of images suffering.
The second lunar probe has a designed lifespan of six months, but it is expected to last longer in space. The mission planners have three possible scenarios for how Chang'e-2 will end its mission.
"It might end like its predecessor and crash into the moon, fly further into deeper space, or come back to Earth," said Yu.
The decision will be up to the "condition" of the satellite, he said.
Lunar exploration is a high-risk endeavor. Since 1958, the United States, Russia (and previously the Soviet Union), the European Union, Japan, China and India have sent lunar probes to the moon. Half of the 126 missions failed.
China proved its capability to explore outer space by launching the Chang'e-1 orbiter in 2007, which ended its 16-month mission in 2009 by crashing into the lunar surface. It plans to send three spacecraft to the moon in the second stage of its lunar exploration program, including Chang'e-3, which is slated to soft-land on the moon in about 2013, and Chang'e-4, which is a backup for Chang'e-3.
The Chang'e satellites are named after a mythical Chinese goddess who flew to the moon.
China is also the third nation, after the US and Russia, to launch people into space after Yang Liwei was put into orbit aboard the spaceship Shenzhou V on Oct 15, 2003. Another three astronauts were sent into space in Shenzhou VII and carried out the country's first space walk in September 2008.
China is planning to send a module, Tiangong-1, into space to carry out China's first space docking, with the Shenzhou VIII spacecraft, both to be launched in 2011. Xinhua, AP and Reuters contributed to this story.
China is planning to send a module, Tiangong-1, into space to carry out China's first space docking, with the Shenzhou VIII spacecraft, both to be launched in 2011. Xinhua, AP and Reuters contributed to this story.
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