News
The Chang'e-4 mission's Yutu-2Rover is still active on the lunar surface. The Chang'e-4 mission landed on the moon in 2019.
Discoveries Beneath the Lunar Surface The Chang'e-4 rover has been tirelessly exploring the moon's hidden terrain, uncovering layers of lunar soil, dust, and fractured rock within the top 130 feet ...
Chang'e 6 built off the accomplishments of two previous Chinese missions: Chang'e 4, which soft-landed on the far side of the Moon and used a rover to explore the surface, and Chang'e 5, which ...
Chang’e 4, the second Chinese lunar lander, set down on a relatively small farside mare basalt deposit that is extensively mixed with highland ejecta from the nearby and relatively young Finsen ...
The Chang'e 4 lander is the fourth of six planned lunar missions. It was initially constructed as a backup for Chang'e 3, which landed on the near side of the moon in 2013.
Chang’E-4 (CE-4) landed on the eastern floor of the Van Kármán crater, near the Moon’s south pole, on Jan. 3, 2019.
China's Yutu 2 lunar rover, as seen by the Chang'e 4 lander, on the far side of the moon. The 2026 Chang'e 7 mission will also feature a large rover, as well as a lander and a small hopper that ...
Quick update on Chang'e 6 mission. The Ascender was a no show today, indicative it has been deorbited and impacted on the Moon as CE5's did following expected mission timeline.
The Chang'e 6 lander will collect 4.4 pounds (2 kilograms) of lunar dirt and rock, some of it scraped from the surface and some of it drilled from up to 6.5 feet (2 meters) underground.
Chang’e 6 launched on May 3 of this year aboard a heavy-lift Long March 5 rocket — China’s equivalent to a Delta 4 or Falcon 9 rocket — and then proceeded through several discrete phases.
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results