The Desi Tadka (2020) Hindi Web Seriesrace to land on the moon will bleed into 2024 as more national space programs and private companies pursue the daunting feat.
Though only about half of all lunar landing attempts have succeeded without crashing, space fans will likely get many spectacular Earth and moon photos along the way, like the latest one beamed back by Japan: Its uncrewed SLIM mission, short for Smart Lander for Investigating the Moon, captured a rare snapshot of Earth looming over the moon, though you might have to squint to see it. Japan, illuminated at dawn, is circled on Earth in the picture.
"When the SLIM team first saw this image, they wondered… what is that white dot under the Earth?!" said JAXA, NASA's Japanese counterpart, on X (formerly known as Twitter) on Dec. 20.
SEE ALSO: India's moon lander makes history as first to reach coveted south poleThis Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
At the time the photo was taken in September, the spacecraft was over 60,000 miles away from our home planet.
Today, SLIM is much closer to the moon than Earth and is expected to enter lunar orbit in less than a week.
JAXA will descend toward the lunar surface for its landing on Jan. 20. That will put it a few weeks ahead of U.S.-based Astrobotic Technologies' moon landing effort, which will try to bring five NASA instruments to the surface, among other payloads. The SLIM mission follows private Japanese company ispace's failed lunar landing in April.
The reason the spacecraft is seen traveling fartherfrom the moon in this navigation camera image is a result of SLIM's special fuel-saving trajectory, said Jonathan McDowell, an astronomer at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics.
When the spacecraft reaches the point in space where the gravitational pulls of Earth and the sun are balanced, it can change direction rather easily, without having to fight the tugs of either the planet or the star, he told Mashable.
"With a tiny spritz of the rocket thruster, you can fall back toward the moon on a path that will pass the moon relatively slowly, allowing you to land easily," he said. "The downside is that it takes several months instead of a few days to get there from Earth."
While the spacecraft flies on this leisurely journey, the moon continues to do its thing: circle Earth each month.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
"Over several months, the moon whizzes around the Earth several times," McDowell explained, "so during this, sometimes relative to SLIM, it's on the same side of the Earth, and sometimes it is on the other side."
The SLIM mission launched from the Tanegashima Space Center in Japan on Sept. 7 and is expected to touch down near Shioli crater on the moon's near side. Its goal is to demonstrate a so-called "pinpoint landing" with an accuracy of less than 100 yards, a level of precision unprecedented for moon landings. Most landing targets are many square-miles in scope.
In August, India became the fourth country to land on the moon, joining an elite cadre of space-faring nations — the former Soviet Union, United States, and China — who have achieved this feat. The accomplishment came mere days after the Russian space agency Roscosmos lost its Luna-25 robotic spacecraft, which had been orbiting the moon but apparently crashed after a botched flight maneuver. The dueling missions were both trying to set their crewless spacecraft down near the south pole region.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
About 60 years have passed since the first uncrewed moon landings, but touching down remains onerous. The moon's atmosphere is very thin, providing virtually no drag to slow a spacecraft down as it approaches the ground. Furthermore, there are no GPS systems on the moon to help guide a craft to its landing spot.
Several nations and private companies have set their sights on the moon's south pole because of its ice, thought to be buried there in permanently shadowed craters. The natural resource is coveted because it could supply drinking water, oxygen, and rocket fuel for future missions, ushering a new era in spaceflight.
Previous:The Sound and the “Furious”
Next:Time to Unite
Internet Association files motion against FCC's net neutrality rulingVivo V9 is an iPhone X lookalike with a powerful selfie cameraDeleting Facebook won't solve all our privacy problemsThe Weinstein Company still owes Malia Obama money after her internshipJ.K. Rowling once used the world's greatest excuse when she was late with book editsAnother Aubrey O'Day song hints at alleged affair with Donald Trump JrNintendo Switch just broke a major U.S. sales record'Delete Facebook' searches hit 5After YouTube ban, gun vloggers find a new home on PornhubInternet Association files motion against FCC's net neutrality rulingMoviePass keeps dropping its prices and we don't know howWorld Water Day: How to get involved and make a differencePeople trying to sell mirrors accidentally take the best selfiesMajor Siri bug exposes all your Signal messages on iPhoneReport: Google might acquire Lytro for around $40 millionSamsung Galaxy Note 9 might come with inMargot Robbie wells up when her brother surprises her in an interviewWorld Water Day: How to get involved and make a differenceReport: Google might acquire Lytro for around $40 millionThere's a house full of creepy statues for sale in Detroit, and we have questions Facebook got hit with $5 billion fine, but it's what comes next that matters most 'Agent Smith' Android malware infected 25M devices Hurricane Barry photos show a Louisiana city deep under water: PHOTOS There is no greater love than the love between this dad and his cube Report: Amazon's pouring more resources into Alexa Smart pet collar is like an iPhone for your dog Watch Joe Biden get dissed by a baby Astronaut photo shows ominous Tropical Storm Barry picking up steam This woman assumed her trainer was flirting, he just thought she looked like Buzz Lightyear This Twitter exchange about space between NFL players will really make you think Blair Braverman uses her adorable dogs to talk about body image Crocodile casually strolls into backyard, gets thwarted by wheelie bins 'Judgment' is one of the best detective games ever Dude's dad is obsessed with a large cube, and Twitter is loving it Mars satellite spies Curiosity rover exploring rugged Martian mountain Facebook's AI crushes professionals in six Why absolutely everyone should be concerned about facial recognition Google Assistant recordings leaked, and oh boy Alibaba just launched its first major effort to crack down on counterfeit goods 'Frankenstein's Monster's Monster, Frankenstein' is the weirdest thing
1.8407s , 10130.2421875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Desi Tadka (2020) Hindi Web Series】,Prosperous Times Information Network