Chinese lunar spacecraft returned with the moon’s ‘earth stone’



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The Chandrayaan Chang’i of China has returned to Earth with a collection of lunar “soil” and rocks. The moon settled on the Sijiwang banner in the country’s northern Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region on Thursday morning local time, according to the state-run Xinhua news agency, citing the China National Space Administration (CNSA). This is the first time a lunar spacecraft has returned to Earth since the 1960s.

China launched the Changi spacecraft on November 24. The spacecraft had an orbiter designed to enter lunar orbit, a lunar spacecraft, and two other spacecraft capable of landing and bringing the lunar spacecraft back to the moon. At 11:11 pm local time on December 1, the lunar spacecraft landed north of the area known as the ‘Storm Ocean’ near the moon.

Pang Jing, deputy chief designer of the Changi Mission at the China Academy of Space Technology under the China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation, said Changi was the first mission to collect lunar samples from Earth in 44 years. He said his spacecraft would collect samples from the moon’s surface, as well as from within, by excavating the surface.

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The mission was to collect two kilograms of samples from the moon. How much was eventually brought in will be known later. If the mission is successful, China will be the third country to collect lunar samples after the United States and the former Soviet Union. BBC and Reuters

Ittefaq / UB



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