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With First-Ever Landing on Moon’s Farside, China Enters “Luna Incognita”

The Chang’e 4 mission could have major effects on earthbound science and politics

A Long March-3B rocket carrying the Chang'e-4 lunar probe including a lander and a rover blasts off from the Xichang Satellite Launch Center on December 8, 2018 in Xichang, Sichuan Province of China.

Editor’s Note (1/3/19): On January 3, the Chang’e-4 lander touched down near the center of Von Kármán crater on the lunar farside, then deployed its rover, called Yutu 2. With the successful deployment of Yutu 2, China now has two operational spacecraft on the moon—the nation’s Chang’e-3 lander remains operational on the lunar nearside.

China is once again on the threshold of a historic first in its fast-paced exploration of Earth’s moon.

Having sent three previous missions moonward since 2007, including one that hosted the nation’s first-ever robotic lander and rover, China’s latest lunar foray began in the early hours of December 8, 2018, when a Long March-3B carrier rocket launched from the Xichang Satellite Launch Center in southwest China’s Sichuan Province, carrying the Chang’e-4 spacecraft. Consisting of a lander and a rover, Chang’e-4 is targeting the moon’s farside, the lunar hemisphere that is always facing away from Earth. No spacecraft has ever achieved a soft landing there before, although in 1962 NASA crashed its Ranger 4 probe into the farside surface.


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After its launch and 4.5-day voyage to the moon, Chang’e-4 nudged itself into an elliptical lunar orbit to await its appointment with fate. Chinese officials have not publicly announced when Chang’e-4 will attempt a landing, but most experts suspect it would occur no sooner than early January 2019, timed to coincide with the onset of the roughly 14-day period when the farside is bathed in plentiful sunlight for the spacecraft’s solar arrays. The spacecraft’s purported landing locale is Von Kármán, a lunar impact crater situated within an even larger impact crater called South Pole-Aitken basin on the lunar farside. That basin is the oldest and largest impact feature on the Moon.

FARSIDE FORENSICS

“Relative to the nearside, in many respects we know very little about the farside,” says Mark Robinson, a planetary scientist at Arizona State University and the principal investigator for NASA’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter Camera (LROC).

One hope Robinson and other U.S.-based lunar scientists have is that Chang’e-4 might be lucky enough to land near an elusive “mare” region on the lunar farside. Composed of ancient, cooled lava, these basalt-rich deposits are abundant on the lunar nearside but far less frequent on the farside. Their name comes from the Latin word for “sea,” which is exactly what astronomers centuries ago suspected they were due to their dark coloration.

“We do not have a documented sample of a farside mare, so this would be a first look,” Robinson tells Scientific American. Mare basalts represent our best look at the moon’s overall composition and also its mysterious mantle—the layer between the core and crust—so a detailed characterization of a farside mare could allow scientists to learn, among other things, why the nearside and farside look so different, he says.

After Chang’e-4 lands, Robinson says, the LROC camera system aboard NASA’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter should be able to clearly spot the Chinese spacecraft after touchdown. “We should be able to identify the lander and rover tracks if not the rover itself,” he says.

SOFT POWER

Jim Head, an eminent planetary scientist at Brown University in Providence, R.I., says the Chang’e-4 mission is further evidence of China’s view of the moon as not only an object of scientific interest but also an important strategic asset in the nation’s long march to become a new global superpower.

“All spacefaring nations have their sights set on the moon, for reasons of both pride—how they view themselves as a nation—and prestige, in the sense of how others view them,” Head says. “Furthermore, as in the initial Cold War competition between America and the U.S.S.R., successful space exploration is a huge demonstration of ‘soft power,’ the ability to show technological prowess and leadership in a non-threatening peaceful manner.” He adds: “China is clearly in the vanguard of renewed international interest in robotic and human exploration of the moon.”

In China’s case, part of the technological might associated with its foray to the lunar farside is a satellite called “Queqiao,” launched in May 2018 to serve as a communications relay for Chang’e-4. Because the moon’s bulk blocks Earthly radio transmissions to and from the farside, only a satellite such as Queqiao can send data in near real time between the spacecraft and its ground-based controllers. Queqiao, Head says, could be seen less as a one-off support mission and more the first piece of a burgeoning “lunar exploration communications global infrastructure.”

As for what he hopes Chang’e-4 might uncover, Head notes that any mission to the lunar farside is essentially to “Luna Incognita,” and thus inevitably will lead to new discoveries. “Exploration is investigating the unknown, and the demonstration that we can land and explore the lunar farside, particularly the South Pole-Aitken basin, is a fundamental accomplishment, the first steps, a foothold on a new ‘continent.’ Just as it is hard to predict the future, it is hard to predict the results from exploration of the unknown. That’s why we explore!”

WHAT NEXT?

If all goes according to plan, Chang’e-4 should be followed by the Chang’e-5 mission now slated for launch in late 2019. Chang’e-5 will mark China’s second mission to the lunar nearside and will attempt to retrieve samples from Mons Rümker in Oceanus Procellarum, a large area of lunar mare in the northwest of the Moon’s nearside.

Meanwhile, other nations have lunar exploration plans of their own. India’s Chandrayaan-2 lunar lander is set to launch in early 2019, and Russia has announced its intentions to undertake a robotic mission to the moon within the next five years. In the U.S., prodded by the Trump administration’s pro-moon stance, NASA is planning the “Gateway,” a lunar-orbiting astronaut-tended space station, as well as a Commercial Lunar Payload Services (CLPS) program that would be a public-private partnership to rely on private industry to offer transportation to and from the lunar surface for select payloads.

“CLPS in particular provides multiple platforms and capabilities to reach the Moon through commercial opportunities and partnerships. These CLPS opportunities are key to rapid innovation and rapid spaceflight, and it will be interesting to compare the results of the United States and Chinese approaches in the coming few years,” says Head.

COOPERATION OR COMPETITION?

John Logsdon, professor emeritus of political science and international affairs at George Washington University’s Space Policy Institute, says that now is the time to cooperate rather than compete in a renewed global push for lunar exploration.

“China's farside lander is the next step in the country's long-planned program of lunar exploration. As the United States plans its own lunar campaign, to me it makes no sense to exclude Chinese achievements from [an] integrated approach to learning more about the Moon,” says Logsdon. “Rather than view Change’e-4 as competitive and a threat to U.S. leadership, perhaps the new Congress will allow NASA to work with China as well as other spacefaring partners in a truly global exploration effort.” In 2011, Congress enacted legislation forbidding NASA from any bilateral coordination with China.

According to Marcia Smith, a space policy expert and editor of SpacePolicyOnline.com, from a science standpoint China’s interest in studying the Moon seems to dovetail with NASA’s renewed interest in all things lunar. Chang’e-4 involves a number of international partners on the mission from the Netherlands, Germany, Sweden and Saudi Arabia, she notes. NASA is seeking partners for its lunar program, too, but must exclude China as a result of Congress’s legal prohibitions.

LUNAR GEOPOLITICS

“Granted, the geopolitical situation with China is delicate, but the same is true of Russia, yet NASA and Russia have extensive space cooperation that is heralded as the exception to strained relationship on other fronts,” Smith says.

So, the circumlunar question of U.S.-China moon politics looms large: If NASA is allowed to cooperate with Russia to achieve common civilian space goals, why not China? 

“NASA is anxious to put laser retroreflectors on any spacecraft that lands on the moon,” Smith says. “Perhaps adding one to Chang’e-5 could be a first step.” Congress’s prohibition is not complete, she notes. The language of the act limiting bilateral cooperation instead mandates that Congress must pre-approve anything NASA does with China. “So, the compromise could be to keep the language, but encourage NASA to take a first step, like the retroreflectors or some other small scientific project, and see what happens.”