Update for Jan. 21: The Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency said it shut down its moon lander to conserve battery power, but added that the lander might be recharged and revived if sunlight hits the spacecraft’s solar cells at the right angle.
Japan has become the fifth nation to land a functioning robot on the moon, but the mission could fall short of complete success due to a problem with the landerās power-generating solar cells.
TheĀ Smart Lander for Investigating Moon, or SLIM, was launched along with anĀ X-ray space telescope called XRISM from Japanās Tanegashima Space Center in early September ā and after weeks of in-space maneuvers, SLIM touched down today at 1520 GMT (7:20 a.m. PT Jan. 19, or 12:20 a.m. JST Jan. 20).
The Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency reported that the landing was successful. During a news briefing, Hiroshi Kuninaka, director general of JAXAās Institute of Space and Astronautical Science, said the achievement marked āa major milestoneā in Japanās effort to send spacecraft to the moon, and eventually to Mars.
Kuninaka said SLIM was able to communicate with Earth and respond to commands. āHowever, it seems that the solar cells are not generating electricity at this point in time,ā he said. āAnd since we are not able to generate electricity, the operation is being done using batteries alone.ā
Mission controllers prioritized efforts to transmit the data stored on the lander back to Earth before the batteries ran out. SLIM was expected to lose power within hours if the solar panel problem couldnāt be fixed.
Kuninaka said the problem could have arisen because the solar cells werenāt properly aligned toward the sun. āWe are trying to analyze the data that weāre gathering at this point in time and analyzing the status,ā he said.
The lander was designed to make a precision touchdown near Shioli Crater, in a region of the moon not far from where the Apollo 11 and Apollo 16 landings took place more than 50 years ago. SLIMās objective was to land within 100 meters (330 feet) of the targeted landing spot. The plan for an ultra-accurate moonshot explains why SLIM came to be called āMoon Sniper.ā Kuninaka said mission managers would need āa little more timeā to confirm how close SLIM came to the target.
He also said two mini-rovers, known as LEV-1 and LEV-2, were successfully deployed during SLIMās descent to the surface. LEV-1 is built to capture imagery and record temperature and radiation levels as it hops around the surface. LEV-2 has the shape of a deformable sphere, and is designed to roll around the surface to take pictures.
āIf LEV-1 and LEV-2 are functioning properly, then SLIMās photos and images have been taken by LEV-1 and LEV-2. I believe such data is now being sent to us,ā Kuninaka said.
Despite the power problem, SLIMās successful landing was a welcome development for JAXAās space exploration program. It added Japan to a short list of countries that have guided robotic spacecraft to soft landings on the moon ā a list that also includes the U.S., Russia, China and India.
Other recent developments have demonstrated that putting a robot on the moon isnāt easy. This week, for example, Astroboticās Peregrine lunar lander fell back to Earth after a propellant leakĀ ruled out a moon landing.
Last year, a different type of commercial lander ā built by a Japanese startup called ispace āĀ failed during its descent to the lunar surface. Russiaās Luna-25 mission alsoĀ ended with a crash landing on the moonĀ last year. In 2022, a Japanese mini-probe called OmotenashiĀ failed to functionĀ after its deployment during NASAās Artemis 1 moon mission. And in 2019, the Israeli-built Beresheet moon probeĀ failed to stick its landing.
In contrast, IndiaāsĀ Chandrayaan-3 lander/rover missionĀ and ChinaāsĀ Changāe missionsĀ stand out as notable successes in the recent wave of moon exploration efforts.
This report was published on Universe Today with the headline āJapan’s Moon Lander Touches Down, But Power Problem Mars Its Mission.āĀ Licensed for republication underĀ Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
