INCREDIBLE images from China's Chang’e 6 lander, which landed on the far side of the moon late on June 1 and lifted off in an ascent vehicle with the first lunar samples from the far side of the moon yesterday.
[#RIP on the #Moon, #DORN ...] The lunar phase of the Chang'e6 mission comes to an end ...
The #regolith samples have been successfully collected. #DORN took the expected radon and polonium measurements for almost 23 hours - data analysis is already underway. The upper section of the Chang'e6 probe has re-launched from its base - heading for the lunar orbiter, leaving behind our instrument ...
Congratulations to the @cnes and IRAP teams who designed and operated DORN 👋
China's Chang'e-6 probe has lifted off from the far side of the moon, starting its journey back towards Earth, China's national space agency announced on Tuesday.
The probe's successful departure from the moon means China is closer to becoming the first country to return samples from the far side of the moon, which permanently faces away from Earth. #AureFreePress#News#press#headline#China#moon#lunar
ATTERRISSAGE REUSSI 🎉
Cette nuit, la sonde Chang'e 6 🇨🇳 s'est posée dans le cratère Apollo sur la face cachée de la Lune 🌒
Il transporte l'instrument DORN 🇫🇷 qui va mesurer le taux de radon.
Tellement heureux pour mes amis toulousains qui l'ont conçu et l'opèrent !
On the lunar surface, a single Earth day would be 56 microseconds shorter — a tiny number that can lead to significant inconsistencies over time. That’s why scientists aren’t just looking to create a new “time zone” for the Moon, but an entirely new “time scale” that accounts for the faster speed at which seconds tick by up there. CNN explains: https://flip.it/V_LgSS #Science#Space#Moon#Time#NASA
If you’ve been looking at everything NASA is doing and wondering “ok but when are we ACTUALLY going back to the moon, and what’s the plan here?” this video is for you.
Here’s a rough timeline of the Artemis program, along with context:
Our Moon: How Earth's Celestial Companion Transformed the Planet, Guided Evolution, and Made Us Who We Are by Rebecca Boyle, 2024
Acclaimed journalist Rebecca Boyle takes readers on a dazzling tour to reveal the intimate role that our 4.51-billion-year-old companion has played in our biological and cultural evolution.
If the moon is the final frontier for humankind, we need to figure out what we’re going to eat up there. In the next two years, NASA plans to send astronauts back to the moon, which provides some insight into what our lunar lunches will look and taste like. “Food is something that keeps astronauts sane,” says Dr. Sonja Brungs of the European Space Agency. BBC Travel has more on what astronauts eat — and what the rest of us might one day consume there. https://flip.it/Xp352- #Science#Food#NASA#Moon