8 January 2019

'This is more than just a landing': Why China's mission at the far side of the moon should be a wake-up call for the world

DAVE MOSHER

China landed a spacecraft called Chang'e 4 on the moon's far side for the first in human history. A rover and lander will study lunar geology, look for water ice, scan the night sky for radio bursts, and even grow silkworms. But Chang'e 4 is just one mission leading to a sample return, crewed lunar landing, and perhaps even the construction of permanent moon bases. The moon mission can be seen as yet another sign in the erosion of US standing in science, technology, mathematics, and engineering.

After several weeks of coasting through the void between Earth and its moon, China landed a space mission called Chang'e 4 on the lunar surface.However, Chang'e 4 didn't touch down just anywhere: China parked the car-size lander and its rover on the moon's far side - an enigmatic region that, until now, humans have only explored from above.

China's feat was celebrated around the world by space exploration enthusiasts and even top-level NASA officials. After all, it could help unlock ancient secrets of the moon's violent formation, scan a crystal-clear night sky for radio objects billions of light-years from Earth, and even help locate deposits of water ice.

"America's space program has always set the example for the world. China's moon landing is a scientific achievement no doubt," Mark Kelly, a retired NASA astronaut, tweeted on Friday. But he added the mission is "also a reminder that we need to get back to policy over politics" or "the world might leave us behind" - with "we" being the United States of America.

Kelly is as patriotic and informed an astronaut as they come, and calls developments in space as he sees them. He's also not alone in believing China may soon blow past the rest of the world in space exploration.

"This is more than just a landing," Alan Duffy, an astronomer at the Royal Institution of Australia, told the Washington Post after the landing.

Here's what the Chang'e 4 mission is, why China landed it on the far side of the moon, and why it should be a wake-up call - though not a shocking one - to the US and the rest of the world.

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