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- Jonathan Amos
- BBC Science Correspondent
China’s Chang’e 5 lunar mission has completed a new phase of work, powering up and going into orbit with samples collected from the lunar surface.
At 11:10 p.m. on December 3 Beijing time (15:10 GMT), the ascendant of Chang’e 5 ignited as planned to dock with the orbital return assembly that brought in moon rocks and dust from return to earth. The motor.
The last time a lunar sample was brought to Earth was more than 40 years ago.
To achieve the mission’s success, Chang’e-5 still has several key steps to complete.
The ascendant must merge with the orbiter and the sample must be transferred and transferred.
These samples will be stored in the return device and are expected to reach Inner Mongolia. To return to the ground, the returner must also experience a violent, high-speed descent process through the Earth’s atmosphere.
At approximately 11 p.m. on December 1 Beijing time, Chang’e 5 landed on the moon, then immediately began taking surface samples and drilling into the nearby lunar soil.
The lunar landing hardware is equipped with a power descent system that will be left on the moon when Chang’e-5 leaves the lunar surface.
Chinese TV channels broadcast a video of Chang’e 5 leaving the surface of the moon.
A camera was installed on the surface of the landing system at an upward facing angle, this camera recorded the ignition of the ascendant rocket motor and its rapid departure.
If the Chinese controllers advance the next steps according to the original public schedule, the ascender docking and the in-orbit return assembly will take place on Saturday GMT.
If there are no accidents in this process, the lunar samples should be returned to Earth by the middle of this month.
The last time humans conducted a mission to retrieve samples from the moon was in 1976.
In the past, soil and lunar rock samples brought to Earth by American astronauts from Apollo and the Soviet Union’s unmanned lunar project weighed less than 400 kilograms.
But these samples are very old, more than 3 billion years old. The material brought in by Chang’e-5 will be very different.
The target of this mission in China is a tall volcano called Mons Rümker. It is located northwest of the front face of the moon.
The history of the samples here must not exceed 1.2 billion or 1.3 billion years. And this will provide us with more information about the geological history of the moon.
These samples will also help scientists more accurately calibrate the “astronomical clock” they use to determine the time of events in the solar system.
The “Astronomical Clock” is made by researchers who count craters: the more craters, the older the surface. But this depends on deterministic dating of a number of locations, and samples brought back from the Apollo and Soviet projects played a key role in this in the past. Chang’e-5 can provide more data points.