Why is Japan’s ‘moon sniper’ landing mission important?

A H-IIA rocket carrying the Japanese national space agency’s moon lander being launched at Tanegashima Space Centre on Sept 7, 2023. PHOTO: REUTERS

TOKYO - Japan aims to become the fifth country to put a spacecraft on the moon when it attempts the precision landing of the Smart Lander for Investigating Moon (Slim) probe on Jan 19.

Dubbed the “moon sniper”, Slim will put to the test an experimental technology the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (Jaxa) says is unprecedented and essential to searching for water, and other factors that could sustain life on the moon.

Jaxa will start a 20-minute touchdown phase on its one-way mission from 1500 GMT on Jan 19, trying to land on a site roughly the size of two athletic tracks located on the slope of a crater just south of the lunar equator.

What is Japan’s precision moon landing?

More than two decades in development, the Slim project is Jaxa’s second lunar landing attempt. It lost contact with the Omotenashi lander shortly after launch in 2022.

Slim is designed to land within 100m of its target, versus the conventional accuracy of several kilometres for lunar landers. As the probe descends onto the surface, it recognises where it is flying by matching its camera’s images with existing satellite photos of the moon. This “vision-based navigation” enables a precise touchdown, Jaxa says.

The precision landing technology will become a powerful tool in future exploration of hilly moon poles – seen as a potential source of oxygen, fuel and water – and boosts a lunar lander’s chance of survival by helping it select the best location for solar power generation, according to Jaxa.

What are challenges and other objectives?

Only four nations – the former Soviet Union, the United States, China and India – and no private companies have achieved the soft landing on the moon’s surface.

Jaxa has twice landed on small asteroids, but landing on the moon is more difficult due to its gravity. In 2023, probes from Russia and Japanese start-up ispace crashed into the moon’s surface. A lander from US start-up Astrobotic last week suffered a fuel leak, forcing it to abandon a touchdown attempt.

Manufacturing a lightweight moon lander with less fuel consumption was another objective of the Slim project, as Japan aims to carry out more frequent missions in the future by reducing launch costs. Slim weighs 700kg at launch, less than half of India’s Chandrayaan-3 that in August made a historic touchdown on the moon’s south pole.

What about recent setbacks?

In March, Jaxa manually destroyed the initial model of new flagship rocket H3 after launch due to engine ignition trouble.

The failure caused widespread delays in Japan’s satellite launches and space missions, including Slim and another joint lunar polar exploration project with India, which is now slated for 2025.

Jaxa also failed to launch an Epsilon small rocket in 2022, followed by an engine explosion during a test in July.

Jaxa has completed the investigation into the first H3 rocket’s failure in 2023 and set the launch date of its second model to Feb 15.

What are other missions to the moon?

A number of lunar landers will be headed to the moon in 2024. US start-up Intuitive Machines aims to launch its IM-1 lander in mid-February. China plans to send its Chang’e-6 spacecraft to the far side of the moon in the first half of 2024 to retrieve samples from an ancient basin. Tokyo-based ispace has said it would launch its second moon mission in 2024.

Nasa plans the launch of its lunar polar exploration rover Viper in November. The US space agency last week announced fresh delays to its Artemis moon programme, scheduling for 2026 its first astronaut lunar landing in half a century. REUTERS

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