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BEIJING — Hours after a space probe from China made humanity’s first landing on the far side of the moon, sending images of its surroundings back to Earth, scientists on Thursday were waiting for it to deploy a rover that would take still more photographs and scan the surface of terrain never before traversed.
On China’s most-watched TV news program, it wasn’t among the four top stories.
Chinese scientists hailed the landing of the Chang’e-4 probe as evidence of the country’s growing stature in space exploration. “It is human nature to explore the unknown world,” Wu Weiren, chief designer of the lunar mission for the China National Space Administration, said in an interview on the state television network, CCTV. “And it is what our generation and the next generation are supposed to do.”
But compared to previous missions — including those that carried 11 Chinese astronauts into space — reaction to Thursday’s landing seemed strikingly restrained, both in the country’s state-run news outlets and on social media.
The doodle of China’s biggest search engine, Baidu, paid subtle homage to the lander and its rover, but the news was relegated to the fifth item on CCTV’s 7 p.m. news program. It followed three reports on the doings of the country’s leader, Xi Jinping, and an item on a new government zone being developed outside Beijing. In interviews, several people said they had paid little attention to the moon landing.
The muted reaction was a sign that the novelty of the country’s space missions has faded. But the coverage also appeared to reflect political and economic anxieties at a time when Mr. Xi’s government is trying to negotiate a truce in the trade war with the United States and respond to worrisome cracks in the economy.
A woman in a cafe in Beijing, Liu Ying, expressed pride in the space program but said she had not followed the landing closely. She then expressed wonder about the costs. “The economy is bad,” she said. “Is it really a good thing for the country to spend recklessly?”
The government does not disclose how much it spends on its space programs, but it has made it clear that this launch was part of an ambitious goal to establish China as one of the world’s space powers, rivaling the United States. Officials have said the country hopes to establish a lunar base that could provide natural resources for the Earth but also serve as a launching pad for further exploration.
The first of three photographs sent by Chang’e-4 appeared a little over an hour after the spacecraft touched down as planned at 10:26 a.m., Beijing time, in the middle of a crater not far from the moon’s south pole.
One showed a barren, undulating vista pocked by a smaller crater. Contrary to the enduring but mistaken notion that the moon has a “dark side” — you can blame Pink Floyd for that, at least in part — the photograph showed the landscape bathed in an orange hue, casting the sharp shadows from the lander. The other two, in black and white, showed the lander descending.
The spacecraft was the first to land intact on the side of the moon that perpetually faces away from Earth. A Soviet satellite took the first photographs of the far side in 1959, and the Apollo missions circled above it between 1968 and 1972, but the difficulty of communicating with earthbound scientists had always made the idea of landing there more complex, if not necessarily prohibitive.
Dr. Wu, in his televised remarks, said the landing had been a “great kickoff” for future lunar missions, including ones intended to land astronauts — something only the United States has accomplished, sending 12 men to the moon. Under the current schedule, China would send the first astronaut by 2030.
“We are building China into a space giant,” he said.
To overcome the challenge of communicating from the moon’s far side, China had previously launched a satellite called Queqiao, or Magpie Bridge. It now orbits beyond the moon to act as a relay for transmissions to and from the mission control center on the northwestern outskirts of Beijing.
The next step for the Chang’e-4 is to release the rover. That is expected imminently. Officials said that the photograph showed the direction the rover would take.
China’s first lunar probe, known as Chang’e-3, landed on the near side of the moon in 2013. It also released a rover, but it was hindered by terrain and communication problems. After a month it came to a halt, and broadcast only intermittently following that.
Yu Guobin, a spokesman for the Chang’e-4 program, said in televised remarks that the detachment of the rover was the “more important historical moment.”
NASA’s administrator, Jim Bridenstine, congratulated his Chinese counterparts for the successful landing. In a message on Twitter, he called the mission “a first for humanity and an impressive accomplishment!” Twitter is banned inside China’s Great Firewall, but his remark was widely quoted nonetheless.
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/01/03/world/asia/china-change-4-moon.html
On China’s most-watched TV news program, it wasn’t among the four top stories.
Chinese scientists hailed the landing of the Chang’e-4 probe as evidence of the country’s growing stature in space exploration. “It is human nature to explore the unknown world,” Wu Weiren, chief designer of the lunar mission for the China National Space Administration, said in an interview on the state television network, CCTV. “And it is what our generation and the next generation are supposed to do.”
But compared to previous missions — including those that carried 11 Chinese astronauts into space — reaction to Thursday’s landing seemed strikingly restrained, both in the country’s state-run news outlets and on social media.
The doodle of China’s biggest search engine, Baidu, paid subtle homage to the lander and its rover, but the news was relegated to the fifth item on CCTV’s 7 p.m. news program. It followed three reports on the doings of the country’s leader, Xi Jinping, and an item on a new government zone being developed outside Beijing. In interviews, several people said they had paid little attention to the moon landing.
The muted reaction was a sign that the novelty of the country’s space missions has faded. But the coverage also appeared to reflect political and economic anxieties at a time when Mr. Xi’s government is trying to negotiate a truce in the trade war with the United States and respond to worrisome cracks in the economy.
A woman in a cafe in Beijing, Liu Ying, expressed pride in the space program but said she had not followed the landing closely. She then expressed wonder about the costs. “The economy is bad,” she said. “Is it really a good thing for the country to spend recklessly?”
The government does not disclose how much it spends on its space programs, but it has made it clear that this launch was part of an ambitious goal to establish China as one of the world’s space powers, rivaling the United States. Officials have said the country hopes to establish a lunar base that could provide natural resources for the Earth but also serve as a launching pad for further exploration.
The first of three photographs sent by Chang’e-4 appeared a little over an hour after the spacecraft touched down as planned at 10:26 a.m., Beijing time, in the middle of a crater not far from the moon’s south pole.
One showed a barren, undulating vista pocked by a smaller crater. Contrary to the enduring but mistaken notion that the moon has a “dark side” — you can blame Pink Floyd for that, at least in part — the photograph showed the landscape bathed in an orange hue, casting the sharp shadows from the lander. The other two, in black and white, showed the lander descending.
The spacecraft was the first to land intact on the side of the moon that perpetually faces away from Earth. A Soviet satellite took the first photographs of the far side in 1959, and the Apollo missions circled above it between 1968 and 1972, but the difficulty of communicating with earthbound scientists had always made the idea of landing there more complex, if not necessarily prohibitive.
Dr. Wu, in his televised remarks, said the landing had been a “great kickoff” for future lunar missions, including ones intended to land astronauts — something only the United States has accomplished, sending 12 men to the moon. Under the current schedule, China would send the first astronaut by 2030.
“We are building China into a space giant,” he said.
To overcome the challenge of communicating from the moon’s far side, China had previously launched a satellite called Queqiao, or Magpie Bridge. It now orbits beyond the moon to act as a relay for transmissions to and from the mission control center on the northwestern outskirts of Beijing.
The next step for the Chang’e-4 is to release the rover. That is expected imminently. Officials said that the photograph showed the direction the rover would take.
China’s first lunar probe, known as Chang’e-3, landed on the near side of the moon in 2013. It also released a rover, but it was hindered by terrain and communication problems. After a month it came to a halt, and broadcast only intermittently following that.
Yu Guobin, a spokesman for the Chang’e-4 program, said in televised remarks that the detachment of the rover was the “more important historical moment.”
NASA’s administrator, Jim Bridenstine, congratulated his Chinese counterparts for the successful landing. In a message on Twitter, he called the mission “a first for humanity and an impressive accomplishment!” Twitter is banned inside China’s Great Firewall, but his remark was widely quoted nonetheless.
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/01/03/world/asia/china-change-4-moon.html
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