China's Chang'e-6 Probe Lifts Off from Far Side of the Moon with Samples, Headed Back to Earth

Switzerland
China's Chang'e-6 probe lifted off from the far side of the moon with samples on June 4, 2024.
The ascender entered a preset orbit around the moon and stowed gathered samples in a container. The reentry capsule is expected to return to Earth on June 25, 2024.
The Chang'e-6 probe landed in the South Pole-Aitken Basin, an impact crater created over 4 billion years ago and the oldest and largest of such craters on the moon.
The mission is part of China's Chang'e moon exploration program, which aims to put a person on the moon before 2030.
China's Chang'e-6 Probe Lifts Off from Far Side of the Moon with Samples, Headed Back to Earth

BEIJING (AP) — China says a spacecraft carrying rock and soil samples from the far side of the moon has lifted off from the lunar surface to start its journey back to Earth.

The ascender of the Chang’e-6 probe lifted off Tuesday morning Beijing time and entered a preset orbit around the moon, the China National Space Administration said.

The Chang’e-6 probe was launched last month and its lander touched down on the far side of the moon Sunday.

Xinhua News Agency cited the space agency as saying the spacecraft stowed the samples it had gathered in a container inside the ascender of the probe as planned.

The container will be transferred to a reentry capsule that is due to return to Earth in the deserts of China’s Inner Mongolia region about June 25.

Missions to the moon’s far side are more difficult because it doesn’t face the Earth, requiring a relay satellite to maintain communications. The terrain is also more rugged, with fewer flat areas to land.

Xinhua said the probe’s landing site was the South Pole-Aitken Basin, an impact crater created more than 4 billion years ago that is 13 kilometers (8 miles) deep and has a diameter of 2,500 kilometers (1,500 miles).

It is the oldest and largest of such craters on the moon, so may provide the earliest information about it, Xinhua said, adding that the huge impact may have ejected materials from deep below the surface.

The mission is the sixth in the Chang’e moon exploration program, which is named after a Chinese moon goddess. It is the second designed to bring back samples, following the Chang’e 5, which did so from the near side in 2020.

The moon program is part of a growing rivalry with the U.S. — still the leader in space exploration — and others, including Japan and India. China has put its own space station in orbit and regularly sends crews there.

The emerging global power aims to put a person on the moon before 2030, which would make it the second nation after the United States to do so. America is planning to land astronauts on the moon again — for the first time in more than 50 years — though NASA is pushed the target date back to 2026 earlier this year.



Confidence

90%

Doubts
  • It's unclear if any previous missions have explored this specific area of the moon.
  • The exact location of where the samples were gathered was not specified in the article.

Sources

100%

  • Unique Points
    • The landing site for Chang'e-6 is in the South Pole-Aitken Basin, an impact crater created over 4 billion years ago that is 13 kilometers deep and has a diameter of 2,500 kilometers
    • China aims to put a person on the moon before 2030
  • Accuracy
    No Contradictions at Time Of Publication
  • Deception (100%)
    None Found At Time Of Publication
  • Fallacies (100%)
    None Found At Time Of Publication
  • Bias (100%)
    None Found At Time Of Publication
  • Site Conflicts Of Interest (100%)
    None Found At Time Of Publication
  • Author Conflicts Of Interest (0%)
    None Found At Time Of Publication

98%

  • Unique Points
    • Chinese spacecraft carrying rock and soil samples from the far side of the Moon has lifted off from the lunar surface
    • The landing site for Chang’e-6 is in the South Pole-Aitken Basin, an impact crater created over 4 billion years ago that is 13 kilometers deep and has a diameter of 2,500 kilometers
  • Accuracy
    No Contradictions at Time Of Publication
  • Deception (100%)
    None Found At Time Of Publication
  • Fallacies (100%)
    None Found At Time Of Publication
  • Bias (100%)
    None Found At Time Of Publication
  • Site Conflicts Of Interest (100%)
    None Found At Time Of Publication
  • Author Conflicts Of Interest (100%)
    None Found At Time Of Publication

98%

  • Unique Points
    • China's Chang'e-6 lunar probe was launched on May 3 from the southern Chinese island province of Hainan.
    • The probe landed on Sunday in a previously unexplored location in a gigantic impact crater called the South-Pole Aitken Basin, on the side of the moon that permanently faces away from Earth.
    • Chang'e-6 is expected to begin its historic journey back to Earth after collecting samples that scientists believe will help answer key questions about the early evolution of the solar system.
    • The Chang'e-6 mission could still encounter snags at the sampling phase. Chang'e-5 returned 1.73 kg of lunar samples, rather than the planned 2 kg, as the drill was only able to create a hole 1 metre (3.28 feet) deep, rather than 2 metres.
    • China's space programme is competing with the United States to build a lunar outpost in the next decade.
  • Accuracy
    • The landing site for Chang’e-6 is in the South Pole-Aitken Basin, an impact crater created over 4 billion years ago that is 13 kilometers deep and has a diameter of 2,500 kilometers.
  • Deception (100%)
    None Found At Time Of Publication
  • Fallacies (95%)
    The author makes several statements that are supported by facts and do not contain any fallacies. However, there is one instance of an appeal to authority when James Carpenter's opinion is presented as fact without any evidence provided to support it beyond his position as head of the European Space Agency's lunar science office. This reduces the score slightly but does not result in a significant number of fallacies.
    • "To understand that, you need to anchor those events, and that's going to be done with samples from the lunar far side from the South-Pole Aitken Basin."
    • "There was extitly strong collaboration between European and Chinese scientists in analysing the lunar samples brought back by Chang'e-5, and he hoped this would be repeated for Chang'e-6."
  • Bias (100%)
    None Found At Time Of Publication
  • Site Conflicts Of Interest (100%)
    None Found At Time Of Publication
  • Author Conflicts Of Interest (100%)
    None Found At Time Of Publication

99%

  • Unique Points
    • China's lunar probe, Chang'e-6, has successfully taken off from the far side of the moon to begin its journey back to Earth.
    • China is the only country to have landed on the far side of the moon and collected samples from it.
    • Scientists believe that rocks from this region could be very different from those on the near side of the moon.
    • The mission aims to be the first to bring back rock and soil samples from the far side of the moon.
    • China is planning three more uncrewed missions this decade as it looks for water on the Moon and investigates setting up a permanent base there. Beijing's broader strategy aims to see a Chinese astronaut walk on the moon by around 2030.
    • This is the second time China has launched a mission to collect samples from the Moon. In 2019, China became the first country to reach the far side with its Chang'e-4 mission.
  • Accuracy
    No Contradictions at Time Of Publication
  • Deception (100%)
    None Found At Time Of Publication
  • Fallacies (95%)
    No informal fallacies found. Some overstatement and appeals to authority. The author makes a few claims without proper citation (e.g., 'China is the only country to have landed on the far side of the moon'). There are also some instances of inflammatory rhetoric (e.g., 'China says... successfully taken off', 'international science community celebrates').
    • ]China is the only country to have landed on the far side of the moon, having also done so before in 2019.[
  • Bias (100%)
    None Found At Time Of Publication
  • Site Conflicts Of Interest (100%)
    None Found At Time Of Publication
  • Author Conflicts Of Interest (100%)
    None Found At Time Of Publication

100%

  • Unique Points
    • The landing site was the South Pole-Aitken Basin, an impact crater created over 4 billion years ago that is 8 miles deep and has a diameter of 1,500 miles
    • China aims to put a person on the moon before 2030
  • Accuracy
    No Contradictions at Time Of Publication
  • Deception (100%)
    None Found At Time Of Publication
  • Fallacies (100%)
    None Found At Time Of Publication
  • Bias (100%)
    None Found At Time Of Publication
  • Site Conflicts Of Interest (100%)
    None Found At Time Of Publication
  • Author Conflicts Of Interest (0%)
    None Found At Time Of Publication