PHOTO: CNSA
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5 November 2007—China’s first lunar satellite began
orbiting the moon today for the start of a yearlong
mapping and chemical-analysis mission. The craft is the
second probe to arrive in the past month. Japan’s Kaguya
entered orbit on 19 October. India, too, plans a
lunar
mission for 2008.
Chang’e-1, the US $169 million Chinese probe, was
launched on 24 October from Xichang Satellite Launch
Center, located in southwest China’s Sichuan Province.
Designed and built by the China Academy of Space
Technology, the satellite is the first in a series of
three spacecraft that China will use to explore the
moon; they will be launched at five-year intervals.
“Chang’e-1 will be placed into a polar orbit 200
kilometers off the surface, while Chang’e-2 will be a
lander using a possible rover. Chang’e-3 will return
lunar samples to Earth,” says Zongyu Yue, a Ph.D. in
lunar-science analysis at the China University of
Geosciences in Beijing. The Chinese are determined to
send humans to the moon by 2020 with the idea of later
setting up their own lunar base. With an eye toward
that, the main scientific goals of Chang’e-1 are to take
three-dimensional images of the entire lunar surface, to
look for evidence of helium-3 in the lunar soil as a
potential fusion power source, and to look for any water
ice that might be hidden in permanently shadowed polar craters.
PHOTO: ESA
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LEARNING CHINESE: The ESA ground station at Maspalomas, Canary
Islands, is part of the European deep space
network ESTRACK, on loan to China to help track
and control its new lunar satellite, Chang'e 1.
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The lunar mission is made possible through both
politics and technology. China has no deep-space network
of its own for tracking and communicating with the
satellite when it is in lunar orbit. The United States’
network—consisting of sites in California, Australia,
and Spain—is off-limits for political reasons. So the
mission will rely on a combination of Chinese and
European assets.
On the mainland, the country has a Unified S-Band
system, a network of three 12-meter antennas that are
mainly designed for its manned spaceflight program and
which operate in the commonly used 2.2-gigahertz
satellite band. It also has a tracking ship stationed in
the Pacific to aid in the project. Until now, this
system has been adequate for distances as far out as 80
000 kilometers—good enough for China’s Earth-orbiting
satellites and manned missions—but Chang’e-1 will be
orbiting the moon at 400 000 km, and for that distance
China needed something more. So it is adding four large
astronomical radio-dish antennas to the network and
using them as a very long baseline interferometer. The
VLBI allows observations from the four radio telescopes,
strategically stretched across 5000 km of the country,
to be combined as if they were one giant radio dish
antenna.
While the Chinese are confident that their own
tracking, telemetry, and command (TT&C) system would
provide accurate navigation for the flight from the
Earth to the moon, now that Chang’e-1 has pulled into
lunar orbit, the craft will need constant monitoring and
adjustments calculated from range and velocity data from
a deep-space network. Fortunately, the European Space
Agency (ESA) has offered China assistance with
communications and tracking relays to and from the probe
using its deep-space network ESTRACK. ESA’s
collaboration with China began with the end of Europe’s
SMART-1 moon mission in 2006. In preparation for
Chang’e, ESA provided China with the frequencies of the
SMART-1 lunar probe so it could practice for tracking
the Chang’e-1 mission. In return, the Chinese have
offered to share the data gleaned from the Chang’e-1
mission with ESA. “Our support is mainly an exchange of
information and lessons learned from our ESA SMART-1
mission in the area of scientific data handling and
archiving,” says Detlef Koschny, ESA’s project scientist
for the Chang’e-1 mission.