Special Report:
NPC, CPPCC Annual
Sessions 2008
BEIJING, March 11 (Xinhua) -- China will have a recoverable moon rover,
which will carry back lunar soil samples, by 2017 if technical research
"progresses smoothly," said the chief designer of Chang'e-1, the country's first
moon probe, here Tuesday.
China plans to land a probe on the moon in 2013, said Ye Peijian, chief
commander and designer of probe's satellite system, and an academician of the
Chinese Academy of Sciences.
The milestone Chang'e-1 blasted off last October, marking the first step in
China's ambitious three-stage moon mission.
"A recoverable moon rover is a must, though it is a much tougher task than
a moon lander," said Ye, also a member of the 11th National Committee of the
Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC), on the sidelines of
the annual full session of the top political advisory body.
So far all data the experts have obtained about the moon is collected and
processed by remote devices. Having that data examined hands-on by scientists
will be an improvement, Ye said.
"A recoverable moon rover is also vital for a manned moon landing," Ye said
but added that China so far has no plan to land men on the moon.
Scientists have been working on a recoverable moon rover scheme, he said.
"If the government approves it and we start technical preparation now, it will
be finished in 2017."
Ye also admitted that technical challenges remain concerning the landing
mission.
The soft landing vehicle and moon rover should meet high technical
standards as they will have to stay on the moon for three months to a year, he
said.
"A night on the moon is equal to 14 days on the earth, during which the
solar batteries cannot be recharged. It remains a question how the equipment
will be kept warm and working," he said.
The mission also needs a stable and powerful data transmission system as
the information will be sent a distance of 380,000 km back to the earth, he
said.
The government has approved the scheme to develop a non-recoverable landing
moon rover and experts have started working on it, Ye said.
The country will launch another moon orbiter Chang'e-2 around 2009, which
is expected to follow an orbit of 100 km above the moon's surface, 100 km lower
the Chang'e-1, Ye said.
"We also hope to prolong the service of Change'-1 by three to six months,"
he said.