SLIM 'Sniper' Mission Ready for Moon Landing

It was decades after the US and Soviet Russia landed on the moon that China and India did it.

Representational Purpose Only (Photo Credits: File Image)

It was decades after the US and Soviet Russia landed on the moon that China and India did it. Japan could be next with its new pin-point technology.A mere four months after Japan's first attempt to land on the moon ended in failure, the country quickly set its hopes on a second attempt. It launched IN SLIM — the Smart Lander for Investigating Moon — in September 2023.

Also Read | Japan Moon Mission: Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency Confirms Its SLIM Lander Will Make Landing on Moon on January 19.

The spacecraft is better known as Moon Sniper because it was designed as a "pinpoint" lander. Controllers on Earth want to use the technology to land this and future spacecraft at precise locations. And that at midnight on January 20 — Tokyo time — late afternoon central European time.

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If they are successful, Japan will become the fifth nation to have ever landed a spacecraft on the lunar surface. But — it's tough to land on the moon .

What is pinpoint landing?

Japanese officials say the idea is to go from an era of "landing where we can" to "landing where we want" on a celestial body with gravity, such as the moon.

The moon's gravity is about one-sixth of Earth's gravity — its pull is weaker — which is why you can jump about six times as high on the moon as you can on Earth. And that has an impact on how spacecraft land on the moon's surface.

But it's about more than that. Since the beginning of human moon exploration in the 1960s, and the advent of advanced satellites and telescopes and other camera technology, researchers have gathered masses of high-definition images and other data, such as information about the moon's atmosphere. So we know more about the moon's constitution, including where we are likely to find water. Scientists want to land exactly where there is water, such as the south pole. Or, if they are interested in a specific rock on the moon, it's important that a spacecraft can land very close by on a flat piece of land.

How does pinpoint landing compare with conventional landing?

The landing precision of conventional landers can be anywhere between "several and a dozen" kilometers (1 kilometer = 0.62 miles). That's according to the Japanese space agency, JAXA, and its Institute of Space and Astronautical Science. Pinpoint landers aim to bring that range down to about 100 meters (330 feet).

How big is Japan's SLIM moon lander?

SLIM has a dry weight of 200 kilograms (440 pounds) and a boxlike shape and dimensions of 2.4 meters by 1.7 meters by 2.7 meters. The mission's objective is to test lightweight vehicles to facilitate more frequent missions to moons and planets.

Does SLIM have a moon rover and cameras?

Yes. It has radar and a laser range finder to measure the altitude above the lunar surface before landing, and a navigation camera. SLIM uses this "vision-based navigation" technology to measure and correct its position for a pinpoint landing.

On the moon's surface, a multiband spectral camera will investigate the composition of rocks. To further investigate the land, a probe called a Lunar Exploration Vehicle can separate, including a Transformable Lunar Robot, nicknamed SORA-Q, which is the shape of a large egg and fits in the palm of a hand.

SLIM's four-month journey the moon

Japan’s Moon Sniper launched September 7, 2023. Its original scheduled launch on August 28 was postponed due to strong winds.

Within a week, SLIM had completed the first critical phase of its mission, successfully sending signals to Earth and demonstrating normal functionality. It then remained in an Earth orbit until it moved into a lunar transfer orbit October 2.

On December 25, SLIM entered an elliptical lunar orbit, in which its closest point to the moon was an altitude of about 600 km.

It will begin its descent toward the moon January 20 at about 12:00 am (JST) — 4:00 p.m. CET (Berlin), 10 a.m. EST (New York) — and is scheduled to land on the lunar surface 20 minutes later.

Edited by: M. Gagnon

This article was originally published on August 26, 2023, then updated when the launch was postponed August 28, again on September 5, to add a new launch date of September 7, 2023, and last updated January 17, 2024, to add details about the landing date and times on January 20.

(The above story first appeared on LatestLY on Jan 17, 2024 08:00 PM IST. For more news and updates on politics, world, sports, entertainment and lifestyle, log on to our website latestly.com).

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