China’s space agency says Chang’e-6 lunar mission a ‘complete success’

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A large screen shows news footage of China's Chang'e-6 lunar probe collecting a sample from the far side of the moon, in Beijing, on June 4.

News footage of China's Chang'e-6 lunar probe collecting a sample from the far side of the moond in Beijing on June 4.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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- A Chinese probe carrying samples from the far side of the Moon returned to Earth on June 25, state media reported, capping a technically complex 53-day mission heralded as a world first.

The landing module of the Chang’e-6 spacecraft touched down at a predetermined site in Inner Mongolia at 2.07pm, the China National Space Administration said, hailing the mission a “complete success”.

The probe returns bearing soil and rocks from the side of the Moon that faces away from Earth, a poorly understood region that scientists say holds great research promise because its rugged features are less smoothed over by ancient lava flows than the near side.

That means the materials harvested there may help us to better understand how the Moon formed and how it has evolved over time.

The probe “is functioning normally, signalling that the Chang’e-6 lunar exploration mission was a complete success”, China’s space agency said in a statement.

President Xi Jinping said in a congratulatory message that the “outstanding contributions” of the mission command “will be remembered forever by the motherland and the people”, state broadcaster CCTV reported.

Chang’e-6 blasted off from a space centre on the island province of Hainan on May 3 and descended into the Moon’s immense South Pole-Aitken Basin almost exactly a month later.

It used a drill and robotic arm to scoop up samples, snapped some shots of the pockmarked surface and planted a Chinese flag made from basalt in the grey soil.

On June 4, the probe made the first ever successful launch from the far side in what Chinese state news agency Xinhua called “an unprecedented feat in human lunar exploration history”.

National pride, misinformation

China’s burgeoning space exploits are a point of pride for the government, and state media outlets launched rolling coverage of the imminent landing on the morning of June 25.

Live images of the landing site showed workers approaching the landing capsule as several helicopters sat nearby on a broad patch of flat grassland.

One worker planted a Chinese flag next to the capsule, enthusiastically unfurling it into the wind.

Xinhua broadcast footage a day earlier of space agency officials in orange jackets manoeuvring trucks and helicopters onto the dust-blown landing site.

It reported that local farmers and animal herders were evacuated from the area ahead of the touchdown.

“We hope that our country’s space exploration will continue to advance and that our nation will become stronger,” local herdsman Uljii told Xinhua.

But the mission has also sparked a torrent of online misinformation, with some users of the Weibo social media platform seizing on the unfurling of the Chinese flag to push the false claim that Washington faked the Apollo Moon landings, AFP Fact Check found.

A general view of craters on the surface of the Moon captured by China’s Chang’e-6 lunar probe, released on June 4.

PHOTO: AFP

‘Space dream’

Plans for China’s “space dream” have shifted into high gear under Mr Xi.

Beijing has poured huge resources into its space programme over the past decade, targeting ambitious undertakings in an effort to catch up to traditional space powers the United States and Russia.

It has built a space station, landed robotic rovers on Mars and the Moon, and become only the third country to send astronauts into orbit.

But the US has warned that China’s space programme masks military objectives and an effort to establish dominance in space.

China aims to send a crewed mission to the Moon by 2030 and plans to eventually build a base on the lunar surface.

The US also plans to put astronauts back on the Moon by 2026 with its Artemis 3 mission. AFP


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