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China
launches 1st lunar probe
BEIJING—China launched its first lunar probe Wednesday, an initial step
in an ambitious 10-year plan to send a rover to the moon and return it
to Earth. The Chang’e 1 orbiter blasted off with a trail of smoke from
the Xichang Satellite Launch Center in Sichuan province in southwestern
China, according to images from state television.
The launch comes just weeks after China’s regional rival Japan put a
probe into orbit around the moon in a great leap forward in Asia’s
undeclared space race. India is likely to join the regional rivalry
soon, with plans to send its own lunar probe into space in April. The
Long March 3A rocket carrying the probe was launched shortly after 6
p.m. local time after officials from the China National Space
Administration said weather conditions were good for a liftoff.
Several thousand people living within 1 1/2 miles of the launch center
and under the rocket’s trajectory were evacuated two hours beforehand,
the official Xinhua News Agency said. More than 2,000 tourists were also
on hand to watch it soar into space.
The Chang’e 1, named after a legendary Chinese goddess who flew to the
moon, will orbit Earth while technical adjustments are made, and will
enter the moon’s orbit by Nov. 5, administration spokesman Li Guoping
said when the launch plans were announced Monday.
The project’s goal is to analyze the chemical and mineral composition of
the lunar surface. The probe will use stereo cameras and X-ray
spectrometers to map three-dimensional images of the surface. The
5,070-pound Chang’e 1 is expected to transmit its first photo back to
China in late November, and to conduct explorations of the moon for a
year. The launch marks the first step of a three-stage moon mission. In
about 2012 there will be a moon landing with a moon rover. In the third
phase about five years later, another rover will land on the moon and
return to Earth with soil and rock samples, Xinhua said.
In 2003, China became only the third country in the world after the
United States and Russia to put its own astronauts into space. But China
also alarmed the international community in January when it blasted an
old satellite into oblivion with a land-based anti-satellite missile. It
was the first such test ever conducted by any nation.
The Long March rocket had a drawing on it of a moon with an eclipse
which was also designed to look like a dragon. “China Moon Probe” was
written in Chinese on the rocket. A government official said last week
China hopes to join an international space station project that already
counts leading space powers such as the United States and Russia as its
members.
China does not participate in the international space station, due in
part to American unease about allowing a communist dictatorship a place
aboard. The space station’s first section was launched in 1998 and it
has been inhabited continuously since 2000 by Russian, U.S. and European
crew mates. Japan’s space agency said nearly two weeks ago that its
lunar probe was in high orbit over the moon and all was going well as it
began a yearlong project to map and study the lunar surface.—Agencies
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