Wednesday, June 10, 2009

Japanese Spacecraft Set to Hit the Moon


From Space Weather

Japan's Kaguya spacecraft will crash into the Moon on Wednesday, June 10th, at around 1830 UT. The timing favors telescopic observers in east Asia, Australia and New Zealand, who may be able to see a brief flash of light or a plume of debris rising from the Moon's southeastern limb close to selenographic coordinates 80ºE, 63ºS.

Kaguya is a big spaceship. It masses 2,900 kg (6 393.40 lbs) and will hit the Moon at an oblique angle traveling approximately 6,000 km/hr (3 728.22 miles). Whether it tumbles and bounces along the lunar surface or runs headlong into some towering crater wall, no one can say. Clues to the end of Kaguya will come on June 10th in the form of an explosive flash (or lack thereof) and high-res images of the crash site taken by future lunar orbiters.

The impact is not accidental. The Japanese space agency, JAXA, has long planned to end the mission in this fashion. Kaguya has been in lunar orbit since Oct. 2007; it has searched dark craters for evidence of frozen water, mapped the moon's gravitational field, and taken some of the all-time prettiest pictures of Earth's satellite.

Farewell, Kaguya!

Images of the crash, if any are captured, will be posted at Space Weather.

2 comments:

Captain USpace said...

.
Cool stuff, I first heard this here, thanks!

:)

absurd thought -
God of the Universe says
don't explore space...

humans must know their place
never stray from comfort zone
.

MathewK said...

For a second i thought that they were just crashing it into the moon. Glad to know it's served them well so far.