Japan's first moon mission has likely come to an end after a surprising late-game comeback,Jerome Deeds Archives with the spacecraft taking one last photo of its surroundings before the deep-freeze of night.
The SLIM spacecraft, short for Smart Lander for Investigating the Moon, took the image with an onboard camera on Feb. 1, showing ominous shadows cast upon a slope of the Shioli crater, its landing site on the near side of the moon.
The Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency — NASA's Japanese space counterpart known as JAXA — released the image three days after re-establishing contact with SLIM. The team had shut down the robotic spacecraft, which accidentally landed upside down, on Jan. 20 to conserve energy. Because SLIM's solar panels weren't pointing in the right direction, the lander was unable to generate power.
But mission controllers on Earth held out hope the sun's angle would change eventually, allowing them to reboot the lander. Nine days later, they got their wish, rousing SLIM from its sleep.
SEE ALSO: Japan’s moon landing picture might be the space photo of the decadeThis Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Since Monday, the spacecraft has analyzed rocks around the crater with a multi-band spectral camera. JAXA picked the landing spot because of what it could tell scientists about the moon's formation. A leading theory is that the moon was created after something enormous collided with Earth. If that's true, much of the moon's mantle could be similar to Earth rock. Astronomers speculate that some ejected lunar mantle material could be found near the surface of the crater, providing samples for further research.
The special camera completed its planned observation, able to study more targets than originally expected, according to an English translation of a news release from the space agency.
"Based on the large amount of data we have obtained, we are proceeding with (analyses) to identify rocks and estimate the chemical composition of minerals, which will help solve the mystery of the origin of the moon," JAXA said in a statement translated by Google.
Though landing the spacecraft on its head wasn't part of the plan, the JAXA team said the mission accomplished its primary goal of a "pinpoint landing" — that is, one with an accuracy of less than 100 meters, or about 100 yards. Data confirmed the lander was at most 10 meters off its mark, according to space agency officials, which is comparable to 11 yards or less.
The spacecraft has now entered a dormant state, prompted by nightfall on the moon. Because one rotation of the moon is about 27 Earth days, the so-called "lunar night," when the moon is no longer receiving sunlight, lasts about two weeks.
Not much can survive the -270 degrees Fahrenheit brought on by darkness — not even robots. In this freezing temperature, soldered joints on hardware and mechanical parts break, and batteries die.
But rest assured, the JAXA team will try to communicate with its scrappy moon lander when the sun rises again.
"Although SLIM was not designed for the harsh lunar nights," JAXA said on X, formerly known as Twitter, "We plan to try to operate again from mid-February, when the Sun will shine again on SLIM’s solar cells."
New 'Time' cover puts Trump's immigration policy on blast13 songs that should be your next Pride anthemOn Super Bowl Sunday, don't forget to honor 'This Is Us' dad Jack PearsonFTC warns of crypto 'romance scams' ahead of Valentine's Day'Marry Me' English bulldog steals scenes and hearts'The Notebook' starring Donald Trump and Kim JongACLU asks Amazon again to stop giving governments surveillance techCouple arrested in connection with 2016 Bitfinex bitcoin hackNASA sends surprise Webb telescope selfie from 1 million miles awayAndroid 13 to bring themed icons, perWoman saves 'sabretooth squirrel' from its own terrible teethThe Cat Art Show: 'It's no f*cking joke'Hot knife ASMR videos are therapy for your retinasInstagram Stories, gCal, and phone apps: Without Facebook, how are we inviting friends to parties?What the most successful people do, according to this memeKid knocks over $132,000 statue, and his parents are expected to payHow to watch the Samsung Galaxy Unpacked 2022 streamHow to stop Twitter revealing your account through your email or phone numberYouTube's 'limited creator history' note, explainedObama's statement on immigration leaves a bit to be desired Alibaba to bet big on small merchants for Singles Day with RMB 2 billion subsidies · TechNode Lenovo leads the global PC market in Q3 · TechNode BYD supplier RoboSense reports monthly shipments of 20,000+ lidar sensors · TechNode The psychedelic frogfish is an alien found right here on Earth China aims for 50% increase in computing power by 2025 · TechNode Rabbit R1 update boosts battery life 5 essential gadgets for turning your home into a self What's inside Rabbit R1, Humane Ai? New teardown video reveals their guts. Baidu set to launch ERNIE model iteration next week: report · TechNode The Thanos snap for real: Let's remove humans from half of Earth Wordle today: The answer and hints for May 2 SpaceX launches the first part of its satellite internet network What Threads needs to be the next Twitter (sorry, X) Xiaomi launches smaller TV S Pro version in China · TechNode US may limit US companies from engaging with China’s entities on RISC China wins first e Temu initiates 5‰ service fee for merchants · TechNode 'Shardlake' review: Tudor murder mystery works best when it's a buddy comedy ‘Why is my iPhone alarm so quiet?’ Apple says a fix is coming. ChatGPT now saves chat history even if you've opted out of sharing training data
1.8945s , 10134.9453125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Jerome Deeds Archives】,Unobstructed Information Network