The longest lived operational lunar rover, YuTu-2 (2019)

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The longest lived operational lunar rover, YuTu-2 (2019)
ROCK NEWS
Do you remember the "mystery hut"? well neither did I but Yutu-2 has been driving towards it the last few lunar days and finally got close enough for this shocking reveal;
it's a little bunny rabbit on the moon :) https://mp.weixin.qq.com/s/VgtehRidYL8-dk9YtENQfg
China’s first to land
in a depression on the
dark side of the moon.
🍁 Red Leaf Haiku by © John Clark Helzer
Chang'E-4: The Yutu-2 rover isn't wasting any time, & has driven away from the lander toward (but not into) a nearby crater. Reminder that all photos from the far side of the moon are being relayed to earth by the Queqiao spacecraft, which is parked in a halo orbit around the Earth-Moon L2 point, about 61,500km behind the moon. "Halo orbit" means it's about that far behind the moon, but always off to one side or the other from the actual L2 point so it has a line of sight to the Earth. Wouldn't be much of a relay otherwise.
The Chang’e-4 mission spotted material on the lunar surface that appears to contain bits originating from the moon’s interior.
The first mission to the farside of the moon may have found bits of the moon’s interior on its surface.
The Yutu-2 rover, deployed by the Chinese Chang’e-4 spacecraft that landed on the moon in January, detected soil that appears rich in minerals thought to make up the lunar mantle, researchers report in the May 16 Nature. Those origins, if confirmed, could offer insight into the moon’s early development.
“Understanding the composition of the lunar mantle is key to determining how the moon formed and evolved,” says Mark Wieczorek, a geophysicist at the Côte d’Azur Observatory in Nice, France, not involved in the work. “We do not have any clear, unaltered samples of the lunar mantle” from past moon missions.
In hopes of finding mantle samples, Chang’e-4 touched down in the moon’s largest impact basin, the South Pole–Aitken basin (SN: 2/2/19, p. 5). The collision that formed this enormous divot is thought to have been powerful enough to punch through the moon’s crust and expose mantle rocks to the lunar surface (SN: 11/24/18, p. 14). During its first lunar day on the moon, Yutu-2 recorded the spectra of light reflected off lunar soil at two spots using its Visible and Near-Infrared Spectrometer.
When researchers analyzed these spectra, “what we saw was quite different” than normal lunar surface material, says study coauthor Dawei Liu, a planetary scientist at the Chinese Academy of Sciences National Astronomical Observatories in Beijing.
YUTU-2 ON DUTY The Chang’e-4 mission’s Yutu-2 rover (shown) recorded the spectra of light reflected off the lunar surface in the South Pole–Aitken basin, which contain clues about the minerals that make up the soil. CREDIT: CHINESE NATIONAL SPACE ADMINISTRATION
Yutu-2’s spectra revealed soil dominated by olivine and low-calcium pyroxene, which are thought to be ingredients in the lunar mantle. One site appeared to contain about 48 percent olivine and 42 percent low-calcium pyroxene; only 10 percent was a component of the lunar crust called high-calcium pyroxene. The other site showed 55 percent olivine, 38 percent low-calcium pyroxene and a mere 7 percent high-calcium pyroxene.
Chang'E-4: New panoramas from the lunar far side, January 10th 2019, including the Yutu-2 rover. The 2nd photo was flipped sideways in the source article, and I figured I'd leave that way so hopefully Tumbler won't smoosh it into a little thumbnail like it does with horizontal panoramas.
Chang'E-4: Deployment of the Yutu-2 rover on the far side of the moon, January 4th 2019 Fwiw, it took three tries to tag this post with #moon, because Tumblr autocorrect kept changing it to Sailor Moon. It's too late to say "never change", but don't change any further, Tumblr.
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