On 2 June the Chang’e 6 probe landed in the Aitken basin of the south pole of the Moon. For two days he has been collecting samples, buried by drill and surface with a robotic arm. When the capsule reaches Earth, the exact number of samples it has managed to take will be known, but it is expected to be between 2 and 3 kg (Chang'e-5 mission amounted to 1.7 kg).
After the samples were finished, the probe pulled out a small camera with wheels, took a few meters away and photographed the probe with the robotic arm stretched (top image). The samples were kept well and on June 4 took off in the morning. It reached the orbit of the Moon in 6 minutes. On a good road, 6 June will be coupled to the orbital module through a new system of tweezers and bars. Subsequently, the sample container will move from the ascent stage to the return capsule by means of a mechanical zipper transfer mechanism.
The orbital module is located in the orbit of the Moon for 14 days, until the right time to advance towards Earth arrives. If everything goes well, the capsule will reach Earth on 25 June. For the first time, researchers will have hidden samples in favor of the Moon.
James Webb teleskopioaren lehen irudiak eta datuak aurkeztu dituzte: unibertsoari inoiz ateratako argazkirik sakonenak eta exoplaneta baten espektroskopia-datu zehatzenak. “Kosmosaren ikuspegi berri eta iraultzaile bat”, Bill Nelson NASAko administratzailearen... [+]
Marten izotz-azpiko aintzira handi bat detektatu dutela iragarri du Italiako ikertzaile-talde batek. Hego poloan aurkitu dute, izotz-azpian 1,5 km-ko sakoneran, eta 20 km inguruko zabalera du aintzirak. Science aldizkarian eman dute aurkikuntzaren berri.