Lunar program designer says probe working well


Wu Weiren, chief designer of China's lunar exploration program and a national political adviser, told reporters at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing on Sunday afternoon that status of China’s Chang’e 4 unmanned lunar probe, which consists of a lander and a robotic rover, was good and it was working well after a second dormancy period on the lunar surface.
The rover, named Yutu 2, or Jade Rabbit 2, is moving northwestward toward rough terrain.
Wu said the Chang’e 4 mission had garnered a great deal of information and this will be available to researchers around the globe.
The Chang’e 5 robotic lunar probe will be launched around the end of this year and will bring samples back to Earth. If the mission is successful, China, he said, will become the third nation, after the United States and the former Soviet Union, to bring lunar soil to Earth.
The scientist also added that the country plans to launch its first Mars probe in 2020.
- Drones deploy AI to protect mangroves in Guangdong
- Zhejiang braces for rare triple typhoon threat
- China launches cutting-edge maritime research ship
- Science Talk: Quality control key to solving 3D printing pain points
- China sees over 33.7 billion inter-regional trips in H1
- China launches Level-IV emergency response for flood control in eastern Zhejiang, Fujian