The Japanese research robot “Moon Sniper” resumed work on the surface of the Moon

The Japanese research robot “Moon Sniper” resumed work on the surface of the Moon

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The Japanese Lunar Sniper lander has resumed lunar exploration. He has already taken new images of the lunar surface.

“Last night, communication with SLIM (Smart Lander for Investigating Moon) was successfully established and operations resumed. Scientific observations were immediately started,” – reported Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) January 29.

The research robot has already taken new images of the lunar surface.

Due to a power problem that occurred almost immediately after landing on the moon, the spacecraft was turned off for 10 days, writes CNN. Lunar Sniper made a precise landing on January 19, making Japan the fifth country to safely land a spacecraft on the surface of the moon.

A picture taken by “Moon Sniper”.
Photo: JAXA

According to JAXA, the spacecraft landed in the wrong direction after one of its engines failed during docking. Its solar cells could not produce electricity, so the charge was limited.

The agency shut down the lander to conserve power. It claimed that the rover would automatically restart when the Moon changed its tilt towards the Sun, as its solar panel would start generating electricity.

Earlier we told what is known about the area on the moon where the Japanese landing module landed.

Read also: A Japanese probe photographed the Earth from orbit. PHOTO



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