China's Chang'e 5 Mission Lands on the Moon (theverge.com) 32
China's Chang'e 5 mission, tasked with bringing a sample of lunar dirt back to Earth, successfully landed on the Moon on Tuesday, marking the third time that China has placed a robotic spacecraft on the lunar surface. The lander will soon begin digging up samples of lunar soil, which will be returned to our planet later this month. From a report: Chang'e 5 launched from China's Wenchang Spacecraft Launch Site on November 23rd, flying to space on top of a Long March 5 rocket. It's a complex mission consisting of four main spacecraft that will all work together to bring between 2 to 4 kilograms of lunar dirt back to Earth. The quartet traveled to the Moon attached together and got into lunar orbit on November 28th.Two of those four spacecraft include a lander and an ascent vehicle, which are stacked on top of each other. On November 28th, the pair separated from the third spacecraft, Chang'e-5's service module, which remained in orbit around the Moon. The lander and ascent module touched down on the lunar surface today, according to CGTN, though a time was not provided. Now over the next few days, the lander will use a robotic arm to drill into the lunar dirt and scoop up rocks, storing them inside a sample container.
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and they can clam it now. Like hong kong and taiwan
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Welcome to our new Chinese robot overlords? (Score:1)
Obligatory joke, but better than the vacuous and off-topic FP Subject. AC stinks again.
No schadenfreude here, alas.
But it does remind me of another amusing news stroy Slashdot missed. And another. And another. And...
I didn't even care enough to read the article about the Chinese submarine. Didn't even want to find it that was a Chinese robot underlord.
If that ain't funny, I don't know what is. And I don't.
*sigh* Would you believe "I know it when I see it"?
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Actually, what I got from the story, was that four space vehicles were used in achieving the goal. In terms of functionality and long term value, what other roles could have been included into the vehicles when they are no longer needed for their original role. Even parked safely up there, so they can be dismantled and used as parts for other space vehicles or stations et al up there.
To make you happy, perhaps a robot 'Clam' overlord, to gobble up all other space vehicles to use those parts to create a 'sup
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The US has over 270,000 deaths (#1), next closest country is Brazil at 173,000. That's 18% of global deaths with 5% of global population.
Deaths divided by Confirmed cases is about 2.3% globally, and 2% for the US,
https://www.arcgis.com/apps/op... [arcgis.com]
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They know:
https://news.slashdot.org/stor... [slashdot.org]
Happy Landings! (Score:2)
And ...? (Score:2)
Did the 4 guys who dismantled the monolith in Utah re-erect it in time on the moon?
High and low (Score:4, Insightful)
By the submissions today, it seems that they both went to the deepest place on earth and made it to the moon on the same day.
Something of a warning shot to the west, there.
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Don't worry, the white-wing flakes will be all over this any minute, claiming it didn't happen, and it's going to crash, and whatever bs they can come up with.
Rather than cheering that humans did it.
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A better description might be "wake up call". Even now, even in this very discussion, people write off China as having no talent of its own and having stolen everything. That's the same mistake that was made with Japan, and I've known people who were still repeating the "they just copy the West" line only a few years ago.
Meanwhile everyone is buying superior Japanese cars and we are starting to see Chinese ones gain market share.
China is making steady progress towards landing people on the Moon, and good lu
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Eh, most Americans always think that everything is about them. They're wrong, this has nothing to do with any sort of imaginary competition with the US. This is China demonstrating to the Third World that they're a modern and technologically competent nation worth partnering with for the future.
Congratulations, China!! (Score:5, Insightful)
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I agree. This is impressive and grounds for congratulations.
We have flags... (Score:2)
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Uh...I'm pretty sure those flags have turned white, if not disintegrated. [businessinsider.com]
Re:We have flags... (Score:4, Informative)
The first flag on the moon was actually Soviet. One of the Lunas soft landed and took photos well before Apollo 11.
The communists did what the US did 60 years ago? (Score:2)
Are we saying China should embrace the freedom and prosperity Americans have enjoyed since the US started?