Chinese probe crashes into moon
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/-/1/hi/world/asia-pacific/7917957.stm Version 0 of 1. A Chinese lunar probe has crashed into the moon in what Beijing has called a controlled collision. The Chang'e 1 lunar satellite hit the moon's surface at 1613 local time (0813 GMT) at the end of a 16-month moon-mapping mission. China launched the spacecraft in late October 2007 on a mission to survey the entire surface of the moon. China's ever-more ambitious space programme includes plans for a space station and landing a man on the moon. Future missions Launched into space on one of China's Long March 3A rockets, the probe mapped the moon's surface using stereo radar. Chang'e 1 was under the remote control of two stations in Qingda, eastern China, and Kashgar in the north-west of the country, the Xinhua news agency said. China became only the third nation - after the Soviet Union and the US - to put a manned spacecraft in orbit in 2003. State media said on Sunday China would launch a space module next year and carry out the country's first space docking. "The module, called Tiangong-1, will provide a "safe room" for Chinese astronauts to live and conduct scientific research in zero gravity," Chinese state media said. "Weighing about 8.5 tonnes, Tiangong-1 is able to perform a long-term unattended operation, which will be an essential step toward building a space station," it added. |