Chinese module to study moon's far side


Liu Jizhong, director of China National Space Administration's Lunar Exploration and Space Engineering Center, said that Chang'e 4 has been engineered to fit the complex landscape and sophisticated communication conditions on the far side of the moon.
In addition to Chinese scientific equipment, the Chang'e 4 mission also involves scientific apparatus developed by the Netherlands, Sweden, Germany and Saudi Arabia.
In May, China launched a relay satellite tasked with transmitting signals between Chang'e 4 and ground control.
China started sending robotic probes to the moon in 2007 and has carried out several lunar missions since then. It landed the Chang'e 3 probe, which carried the first Chinese lunar rover, on the moon in December 2013. The Chang'e 3 mission marked first soft-landing by a spacecraft on the moon in nearly four decades.
The next step in China's lunar exploration agenda, the Chang'e 5 mission, is scheduled for 2019 and will put a rover on the lunar surface to take samples and then bring them back to Earth.
- Tianwen 2 spacecraft halfway to target asteroid
- Vibrant China during holiday: Hitting the road
- International Cartoon and Illustration Exhibition on a Community with a Shared Future for Humanity 2025 Announcement
- Bringing revolutionary history back to life
- New exhibition showcases wartime rescue of artifacts
- Fifty expats awarded for contributions