珍珠湾

岳东晓

Zhen Zhu Wan Online Community Club of Elite Chinese

Zhen Zhu Wan Online Community Club of Elite Chinese


Space mystery: NASA baffled after India moon lander disappears without trace
Post ReplyForum


motif

10/24/2019, 02:23:20




Author Profile | Edit


NASA is baffled after failing to find any trace of India’s moon lander Chandrayaan-2, which mysteriously disappeared earlier this year after it crashed onto the lunar surface.

By Sean Martin
PUBLISHED: 12:00, Thu, Oct 24, 2019 | UPDATED: 12:10, Thu, Oct 24, 2019

Things took a disastrous turn when India’s Chandrayaan-2 spacecraft attempted to land on the Moon on September 6. As it approached the Moon’s south pole, where it had planned to land in order to confirm the presence of water ice, the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) lost contact with the machine. It was presumed the machine crashed into lunar surface but after more than a month of searching, there has been no evidence of Chandrayaan-2 found.

Chairman of ISRO, Kailasavadivoo Sivan, had earlier said the space agency had used thermal imaging to locate the lander, which is nicknamed Vikram, in a crater.

However, a NASA-led search has yielded no results.

Conspiracy theorists quickly jumped to suggest aliens were responsible for the missing Vikram but NASA had a more reasonable response – scientists are looking in the wrong place.

Noah Edward Petro, the Project Scientist for NASA’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter, told Press Trust of India: “The Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter imaged the area of the targeted Chandrayaan-2 Vikram landing site on October 14 but did not observe any evidence of the lander.”

The Chandrayaan-2, which cost roughly $140million (£114million), was intended to study moon craters which are thought to contain water deposits.

So far, the US, Russia and China are the only countries to have successfully landed on the Moon’s surface.

Earlier this year, Israel’s unscrewed Beresheet spacecraft suffered an unfortunate blow after crashing during a Moon landing attempt.

Now, a British firm Spacebit - a London-based startup - plans to launch its robotic “crawler” to the moon by 2021, making it the first time the UK will get to the moon, if all goes to plan.

Spacebit is working in conjunction with US firm Astrobotic which was rewarded a $79.5m (£65m) contract to transport 14 instruments to the lunar surface.

The British firm has high ambitions for when it reaches the moon, including helping to set up a permanent base.

Related link: Express - Space mystery: NASA baffled after India moon lander disappears without trace






Recommend | Alert |
 Post ReplyBack

Followups

�������ʿ֪ʶ��Ȩ����ʤ

Copyright Infringement Jury Trial Verdict

Copyright Infringement Lawsuit Software Jury Trial Verdict

Judge James Ware Presiding: Copyright Infringement Trial

Copyright Trial Attorney

Ninth Circuit Copyright Law - Copyright Jury Trial