China's Chang'e 6 lunar probe returns to Earth with first samples from moon's far side - Action News
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Science

China's Chang'e 6 lunar probe returns to Earth with first samples from moon's far side

China's Chang'e 6 probe landed in the Inner Mongolian region in northern China on Tuesday with rock and soil samples from the little-explored far side of the moon, in a global first.

Scientists hope sample will include 2.5-million-year-old volcanic rock

A gumdrop-looking metal probe lies in a field with the Chinese flag flying nearby and a man in a red jacket and red baseball cap in the distance.
In this photo released by Xinhua News Agency, the return capsule of the Chang'e 6 probe is seen in Siziwang Banner, in northern China's Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, on Tuesday. China's Chang'e 6 probe has returned to Earth with rock and soil samples from the little-explored far side of the moon. (Bei He/Xinhua via The Associated Press)

China's Chang'e 6 probe returned toEarth with rock and soil samples from the little-explored far side of the moon, in a global first.

The probe landed in the Inner Mongolian region in northern China on Tuesday afternoon.

"I now declare that the Chang'e 6 Lunar Exploration Mission achieved complete success," Zhang Kejian, director of the China National Space Administration, said in a televised news conference after the landing.

Chinese scientists anticipate the returned samples will include 2.5-million-year-old volcanic rock and other material that scientists hope will answer questions about geographic differences on the moon's two sides.

The near side is what is seen from Earth, and the far side faces outer space. The far side is also known to have mountains and impact craters, contrasting with the relatively flat expanses visible on the near side.

WATCH | China's Chang'e-6 lands with samples from far side of the moon

China's Chang'e-6 lands with samples from far side of the moon

5 months ago
Duration 0:25
Video, provided by China Central Television, shows the Chang'e-6 probe as it touched down on Earth, bringing back the first samples gathered from the far side of the moon.

The probe had landed in the moon's South Pole-Aitken Basin, an impact crater created more than four billion years ago. The samples scientists are expecting will likely come from different layers of the basin, which will bear traces of the different geological events across its long chronology, such as when the moon was younger and had an active inside that could produce volcanic rock.

While past U.S. and Soviet missions have collected samples from the moon's near side, the Chinese mission was the first tocollectsamples from the far side.

"This is a global first in the sense that it's the first time anyone has been able to take off from the far side of the moon and bring back samples," said Richard de Grijs, a professor of astrophysics at Macquarie University in Australia.

A growing rivalry

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

ChineseLeader Xi Jinping sent a message of congratulations to the Chang'e team, sayingit was a "landmark achievement in our country's efforts at becoming a space and technological power."

The probe left Earth on May 3, and its journey lasted 53 days. The probe drilled into the core and scooped rocks from the surface.

The samples "are expected to answer one of the most fundamental scientific questions in lunar science research: what geologic activity is responsible for the differences between the two sides?" said Zongyu Yue, a geologist at the Chinese Academy of Sciences, in a statement issued in the Innovation Monday, a journal published in partnership with the Chinese Academy of Sciences.

In recent years,China has launched multiple successful missions to the moon, previously collecting samples from the moon's near side with the Chang'e 5 probe.

They are also hoping that the probe will return with material that bear traces of meteorite strikes from the moon's past. That material could shed light on the solar system's early days. There's a theory that the moon acted as a vaccum cleaner of sorts, attracting all the meteorites and debris in the system's earlier era so that they didn't hit Earth, said de Grijs, who is also executive director at the International Space Science InstituteBeijing.

China has said it plans to share the samples with international scientists, although it did not say exactly in which countries.