China’s Chang’e 5 lands on the moon to collect the 1st fresh lunar samples in decades

https://www.space.com/china-chang-e-5-lands-on-moon-to-collect-lunar-samples


China has apparently landed on the moon again — and this time the country plans to bring home some souvenirs,.

Chang’e 5, China’s first-ever sample-return mission, apparently successfully touched down today (Dec. 1), according to state media reports. Details on the landing were not immediately available from the China National Space Administration, but the state-run CGTN news channel announced the landing success in a single-sentence statement. 

Chang’e 5’s landing was expected to occur at about 10:13 a.m. EST (1513 GMT) near Mons Rümker, a mountain in the Oceanus Procellarum (“Ocean of Storms”) region of the moon.

Two pieces of the four-module, 18,100-lb. (8,200 kilograms) Chang’e 5 mission hit the gray dirt today — a stationary lander and an ascent vehicle. If all goes according to plan, the lander will spend the next few days collecting about 4.4 lbs. (2 kg) of lunar material, some of it dug from up to 6.5 feet (2 meters) beneath the lunar surface. 

In pictures: China on the moon! A history of Chinese lunar missions

The sample will then be transferred to the ascent vehicle, which will launch to lunar orbit and meet up with the other two Chang’e 5 elements — an orbiter and an Earth-return craft. The return vehicle will haul the moon dirt and rocks to our planet, with a touchdown planned in Inner Mongolia in mid-December. 

That will be a landmark event; pristine lunar samples have not been delivered to Earth since 1976, when the Soviet Union’s Luna 24 mission came home with about 6 ounces (170 grams) of material.

This illustration shows the components of China’s ambitious Chang’e 5 lunar sample-return mission. (Image credit: All About Space//Future)

Chang’e 5 just launched on Nov. 23, so it’s packing a lot of action into a few short weeks. The compressed timeline is driven largely by the mission’s energy needs: The Chang’e 5 lander is solar powered, so it must get all of its work done in two Earth weeks at most, before the sun sets at Mons Rümker. (One lunar day lasts about 29 Earth days, so most moon sites receive two weeks of continuous sunlight followed by two weeks of darkness.)

Chang’e 5 is the latest mission in the Chang’e program of robotic lunar exploration, which is named after a moon goddess in Chinese mythology. The Chang’e 1 and Chang’e 2 orbiters launched in 2007 and 2010, respectively, and Chang’e 3 put a lander-rover duo down on the moon’s near side in December 2013.

The Chang’e 5 T1 mission sent a prototype return capsule around the moon and back to Earth in October 2014 to help prepare for Chang’e 5. And in January 2019, the Chang’e 4 lander-rover duo pulled off the first-ever soft touchdown on the moon’s mysterious, largely unexplored far side. Both Chang’e 4 robots remain operational today, as does the Chang’e 3 lander.

Though Chang’e 5 has a very short operational life, the mission is designed to have a long-lasting impact. After all, scientists are still studying the 842 lbs. (382 kg) of lunar material brought to Earth by NASA’s Apollo missions from 1969 to 1972.

Some of the Apollo material came from Oceanus Procellarum, a huge volcanic plain that Apollo 12 explored in late 1969. But Mons Rümker rocks formed just 1.2 billion years ago, whereas all of the samples collected by the Apollo astronauts are more than 3 billion years old.

Chang’e 5 therefore “will help scientists understand what was happening late in the moon’s history, as well as how Earth and the solar system evolved,” the nonprofit Planetary Society wrote in its description of the mission.

Chang’e 5 isn’t the only sample-return game in town. Japan’s Hayabusa2 mission is scheduled to deliver pieces of the asteroid Ryugu to Earth on Dec. 5, and NASA’s OSIRIS-REx probe collected samples of the space rock Bennu in late October. The Bennu samples are scheduled to come home in September 2023.

Mike Wall is the author of “Out There” (Grand Central Publishing, 2018; illustrated by Karl Tate), a book about the search for alien life. Follow him on Twitter @michaeldwall. Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom or Facebook. 

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December 1, 2020 at 09:54AM

MIT project generates custom robots to navigate different terrains

https://www.engadget.com/mit-robogrammar-computer-design-robots-adaptation-130507277.html

Researchers at MIT have developed a way for a computer to essentially design its own robotic body, based on the available parts and the local terrain. Dubbed RoboGrammar, the system knows what obstacles it’ll need to cover and what equipment is available, and work everything else out from there. The paper’s lead author, Allan Zhao, told MIT News said that despite the variety of tasks robots are used for, their designs tend to be “all very similar in their shape or design.”

Robots are frequently designed to mimic people, animals (with four legs) or vehicles, with wheels and tracks to move around. But that may not be the most useful or efficient form, which is why RoboGrammar’s only limitation is the practical limits around building robots. For instance, in one simulation where the terrain was rough with lots of slaloms, the best design looks more like a crocodile than anything else. The robot is then put into a simulation of the terrain to ensure it operates in a way that makes sense.

Naturally, the system isn’t yet ready to enable computers to design their own robots without any human input. But this stands as an interesting first step on the road to being able to make devices that are better suited to their environments, and more efficient, than we can currently dream up. The team’s next step is to actually build some of the robots the system has cooked up to see if the simulation’s promise matches the reality. Zhao added that the system could benefit engineers as well as the designers of procedurally-generated video games that need to build populated environments quickly and efficiently. 

via Engadget http://www.engadget.com

December 1, 2020 at 07:12AM