Categories: Science & Technology

Japan’s SLIM moon lander powers down as long lunar night falls (again)

Spread the love

As a Japanese moon lander again went dormant, controllers bid farewell.

Advertisements

The sun stopped shining above SLIM, short for “Smart Lander for Investigating Moon,” as of 5 p.m. EST (2200 GMT) on Thursday (Feb. 29), officials with the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) announced on X, formerly Twitter. SLIM landed upside down on the moon on Jan. 19, which means its solar panels are crooked but can still receive a bit of power.

“Although the probability of failure will increase due to repeated severe temperature cycles, SLIM plans to try operation again the next time the sun shines (in late March),” the update from JAXA read, automatically translated from Japanese to English by Google.

Related: Japan’s SLIM moon lander photographed on the lunar surface — on its nose (image)

Advertisements
Advertisements

The lander woke up on Feb. 26 during extremely hot temperatures of 212 Fahrenheit (100 Celsius) in its region and has been making contact here and there with Earth in the days since. Most recently, SLIM attempted observations with its multiband spectroscopic camera (MBC) attempted scientific observation, but “it did not work properly,” JAXA officials wrote.

Advertisements
Advertisements

“This seems to be due to the effects of overnight,” the update continued, referring to the frigid two-week-long lunar night that SLIM experienced before the sun shone near Shioli crater again. “But we will continue to investigate based on the data we have obtained for the next opportunity.”

SLIM has only operated for brief bursts of activity, including a short observation schedule after landing upside-down Jan. 19 due to engine trouble. Then it had roughly two days of operations after reviving nearly 10 days later on Jan. 29, and then the itinerant work since Feb. 26.

Despite all, SLIM has met both main and extended mission objectives: Landing precisely on the moon, deploying two tiny rovers and conducting science with its navigation camera and its spectroscopic camera, particularly searching for signs of olivine on the surface.

Advertisements

Japan is only the fifth country to soft-land on the moon, following the Soviet Union, the United States, China and India. The U.S. made its own historic moon landing as well recently; the Intuitive Machines IM-1 Odysseus lander touched down softly on Feb. 22 to achieve the first American landing in 52 years, since Apollo 17. Odysseus went offline Thursday (Feb. 29) and may have completed its mission, operators said.



Source link

Advertisements
elizabeth.howell@futurenet.com (Elizabeth Howell)

Share
Published by
elizabeth.howell@futurenet.com (Elizabeth Howell)

Recent Posts

Standard Chartered Bank supports financial inclusion and sustainability in the Philippines

Standard Chartered Bank (SCB), the oldest international bank in the country, has been helping drive…

4 mins ago

Gaza policy makes US a ‘target’: former officials | Israel-Palestine conflict News

The 12 officials say the cover provided to Israel has ‘ensured’ the US’s ‘complicity’ in…

8 mins ago

Humans Are Absorbing Microplastics, and It Is Increasing Our Risk of Cancer, Diabetes, and Heart Disease

A new study highlights the potential health risks posed by increasing levels of micro- and…

14 mins ago

Police investigate hospital admissions and death potentially linked to zopiclone

Police in County Durham are investigating reports of seven adults who were taken to hospital…

15 mins ago

PVL to use different format in return of Reinforced Conference

FILE–A shot of the crowd during the PVL All-Filipino Conference Finals between Creamline Cool Smashers…

18 mins ago

Finding Out These Celebrities Used to Date Will Blow Your Mind

The Good Will Hunting stars paired off in real life, too, but they didn't drive off into…

23 mins ago

This website uses cookies.