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Wed, Mar 24, 2004

China to Launch Moon Rover in 2012

Manned Missions Also Planned  

Move over NASA, you've got competition in the Lunar exploration program. China announced that it plans to launch its first moon rover in 2012 as part of its new ambitious space exploration program. While void of any Neil Armstrong wannabes, the spacecraft's main purpose will be to provide information on finding a suitable location to set up a moonbase, the Beijing Youth Daily newspaper said Sunday, citing Ouyang Ziyuan, lead scientist of the country's lunar probe program.

The rover -- part of the three-phase lunar probe program, also called "Chang'e," after a fairy in Chinese folklore who flies to the moon -- would carry a camera, a telescope and seismological gear to register quake activity on the moon, the report said.

This is no space fantasy, as the first phase is already under way, with Chinese scientists building a two-ton lunar probe that is to be launched by 2007 and orbit the moon for at least 12 months. Once launched, the craft will take three-dimensional lunar images, measure the density of the moon's soil and explore its environment. The satellite launch is to be followed by a moon landing by an unmanned vehicle by 2010 and soil sample collection by 2020, Xinhua said. China's top space official has also said the country wants to land a human on the moon that same year.

So, how much will this new space initiative cost the Chinese government? The Xinhua News Agency put the price tag of the first phase at a cool $170 million.

The new public disclosure of the Chinese program comes after the success of its landmark manned space launch last October, China has raised the profile of its once-secret, military-linked space program and regularly releases information about plans for further exploration. It is now the third country in the world to successfully accomplish manned spaceflight.

FMI: www.cnsa.gov.cn/main_e.asp

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