China’s Chang’e 5 moon craft on a new mission: the sun


ChinaDaily.com.cn reported that the Chang’e 5 moon craft – which on December 16-17 dropped off its return capsule to Earth, returning moon rocks to Earth for the first time since 1976 – is now on a new mission to observe the sun. That’s after an earlier report, on December 22, saying the same thing. The news may be that the amount of fuel remaining to Chang’e was originally overestimated at 400 pounds (200 kg). Now, as explained in the video above, space engineers are reporting just 200 pounds (100 kg) of fuel remaining for Chang’e. The fuel is needed to insert Chang’e into an orbit at an Earth-sun Lagrange point (L1) when it arrives there in mid-March.

Pei Zhaoyu, deputy director of the China National Space Administration’s Lunar Exploration and Space Program Center and spokesman for the Chang’e 5 mission, said in an update this week that L1 is an ideal position for monitoring solar activities. As reported by ChinaDaily:

The point is a place where the gravity from the Earth and the sun balance, so that the probe may orbit the sun in synchronization with the Earth without spending much of its fuel.

Two NASA missions – the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO) and the Deep Space Climate Observatory (DSCOVR) – also operate from the Earth-sun L1 point, which isn’t really a point, but more like a region of space.

A diagram showing the Earth and sun, and the 5 Lagrange points.

Earth-sun Lagrange points, via NASA.

The Chinese Lunar Exploration Program – also called the Chang’e Project – is named for Chang’e, a Chinese moon goddess.

After launching on November 23, 2020, Chang’e 5 orbited the moon for about a week. The extended mission is possible because Chang’e 5’s insertion into lunar orbit was picture-perfect; however much propellant Chang’e 5 has left, it’s been enough so far to send it in another direction in space. Following its capsule release at Earth, the craft was able to perform the maneuver that sent it toward L1.

Once at the L1 point, the craft is expected to observe the sun and take readings of what’s called space weather, conditions in space caused by activity on the sun. Since Solar Cycle 25 has just begun, solar activity will be increasing in the coming years. That means more sunspots, more flares on the sun, and more of the coronal mass ejections sweeping through our solar system, potentially affecting earthly technologies.

The sun, the center blocked for visibility, with a great white extrusion coming out from near the top.

Coronal mass ejection of February 27, 2000. A disk is being used to block out the light of the sun. The white circle indicates the sun’s surface. The sun waxes and wanes in this sort of activity on an 11-year cycle. A new solar cycle – Cycle 25 – has just begun. Image via SOHO.

As reported by SkyandTelescope.org on January 21:

An update from the China Lunar Exploration Program (CLEP) on January 19 states that the spacecraft is now 1.43 million kilometers (889,000 miles) from Earth …

SkyandTelescope.org also reported on other Chinese space missions:

China also repurposed the service module of the Chang’e 5 T1 mission, a test mission that launched in 2014 to test the high-velocity lunar return and skip-reentry required for the later sample return [its test sample return module, named Xiaofei or little flier, landed successfully back in China in 2014]. The module traveled to Earth-moon Lagrange point 2, on the other side of Earth from the sun. That turned out to be a trial run for a relay satellite that facilitated Chang’e 4’s unprecedented landing on the lunar far side.

The Chang’e 5 extended mission marks a first excursion inside Earth’s orbit. Elsewhere, China’s first independent interplanetary mission, Tianwen 1, is due to enter Mars orbit on February 10. A rover landing attempt is expected to follow in May.

A fragile-looking lunar landing vehicle, seen from its mothership to be descending.

China’s Chang’e 5 moon lander and ascent vehicle separated from the orbiter early on Monday, December 1, 2020, ahead of its landing in the moon’s Ocean of Storms. Image via CCTV/ South China Morning Post.

Bottom line: China’s Chang’e 5 moon mission – which successfully returned moon rocks to Earth in December 2020 – is now flying toward a sun-Earth Lagrange point, L1. It is expected to arrive there in mid-March.

Read more from December 22: China’s Chang’e moon craft begins extended mission

Via SkyandTelescope.org



from EarthSky https://ift.tt/3pb7MHA

ChinaDaily.com.cn reported that the Chang’e 5 moon craft – which on December 16-17 dropped off its return capsule to Earth, returning moon rocks to Earth for the first time since 1976 – is now on a new mission to observe the sun. That’s after an earlier report, on December 22, saying the same thing. The news may be that the amount of fuel remaining to Chang’e was originally overestimated at 400 pounds (200 kg). Now, as explained in the video above, space engineers are reporting just 200 pounds (100 kg) of fuel remaining for Chang’e. The fuel is needed to insert Chang’e into an orbit at an Earth-sun Lagrange point (L1) when it arrives there in mid-March.

Pei Zhaoyu, deputy director of the China National Space Administration’s Lunar Exploration and Space Program Center and spokesman for the Chang’e 5 mission, said in an update this week that L1 is an ideal position for monitoring solar activities. As reported by ChinaDaily:

The point is a place where the gravity from the Earth and the sun balance, so that the probe may orbit the sun in synchronization with the Earth without spending much of its fuel.

Two NASA missions – the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO) and the Deep Space Climate Observatory (DSCOVR) – also operate from the Earth-sun L1 point, which isn’t really a point, but more like a region of space.

A diagram showing the Earth and sun, and the 5 Lagrange points.

Earth-sun Lagrange points, via NASA.

The Chinese Lunar Exploration Program – also called the Chang’e Project – is named for Chang’e, a Chinese moon goddess.

After launching on November 23, 2020, Chang’e 5 orbited the moon for about a week. The extended mission is possible because Chang’e 5’s insertion into lunar orbit was picture-perfect; however much propellant Chang’e 5 has left, it’s been enough so far to send it in another direction in space. Following its capsule release at Earth, the craft was able to perform the maneuver that sent it toward L1.

Once at the L1 point, the craft is expected to observe the sun and take readings of what’s called space weather, conditions in space caused by activity on the sun. Since Solar Cycle 25 has just begun, solar activity will be increasing in the coming years. That means more sunspots, more flares on the sun, and more of the coronal mass ejections sweeping through our solar system, potentially affecting earthly technologies.

The sun, the center blocked for visibility, with a great white extrusion coming out from near the top.

Coronal mass ejection of February 27, 2000. A disk is being used to block out the light of the sun. The white circle indicates the sun’s surface. The sun waxes and wanes in this sort of activity on an 11-year cycle. A new solar cycle – Cycle 25 – has just begun. Image via SOHO.

As reported by SkyandTelescope.org on January 21:

An update from the China Lunar Exploration Program (CLEP) on January 19 states that the spacecraft is now 1.43 million kilometers (889,000 miles) from Earth …

SkyandTelescope.org also reported on other Chinese space missions:

China also repurposed the service module of the Chang’e 5 T1 mission, a test mission that launched in 2014 to test the high-velocity lunar return and skip-reentry required for the later sample return [its test sample return module, named Xiaofei or little flier, landed successfully back in China in 2014]. The module traveled to Earth-moon Lagrange point 2, on the other side of Earth from the sun. That turned out to be a trial run for a relay satellite that facilitated Chang’e 4’s unprecedented landing on the lunar far side.

The Chang’e 5 extended mission marks a first excursion inside Earth’s orbit. Elsewhere, China’s first independent interplanetary mission, Tianwen 1, is due to enter Mars orbit on February 10. A rover landing attempt is expected to follow in May.

A fragile-looking lunar landing vehicle, seen from its mothership to be descending.

China’s Chang’e 5 moon lander and ascent vehicle separated from the orbiter early on Monday, December 1, 2020, ahead of its landing in the moon’s Ocean of Storms. Image via CCTV/ South China Morning Post.

Bottom line: China’s Chang’e 5 moon mission – which successfully returned moon rocks to Earth in December 2020 – is now flying toward a sun-Earth Lagrange point, L1. It is expected to arrive there in mid-March.

Read more from December 22: China’s Chang’e moon craft begins extended mission

Via SkyandTelescope.org



from EarthSky https://ift.tt/3pb7MHA

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