Japan Moon Landing Live Updates: SLIM Heads For Lunar Surface

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A rocket is rolled out to the launch pad at dusk, with a crescent moon visible in the sky.

The Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency’s Smart Lander for Investigating Moon at an assembly building at the Tanegashima Space Center in June.Credit…JAXA, via Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

SLIM — an acronym for Smart Lander for Investigating Moon — is a compact robotic spacecraft that is about the size of a small food truck. It weighed more than 1,500 pounds at launch. The Japanese space agency, JAXA, nicknamed it “moon sniper.”

Since its launch in September (sharing a ride to space with XRISM, an X-ray telescope), SLIM has been taking a slow but fuel-efficient route to the moon. It entered orbit on Dec. 25 after a 110-day trip.

The spacecraft’s initial elliptical orbit stretched as far as 2,500 miles from the moon. A firing of SLIM’s engines on Jan. 14 lowered it to a circular orbit about 370 miles above the surface.

SLIM is aiming to set down close to a small crater named Shioli in the equatorial region of the moon’s near side.

If it lands successfully, it will deploy two unconventional rovers, called Lunar Excursion Vehicle 1 and Lunar Excursion Vehicle 2. One uses a hopping mechanism and carries a thermometer, a radiation monitor and an instrument for measuring the slope and elevation.

The second rover is spherical, about the size of a baseball and half a pound in weight. Its two halves will pull apart, allowing the rover to crawl along the surface for a couple of hours until its battery is exhausted. JAXA developed this rover in cooperation with Doshisha University and Tomy, a toy company.

SLIM’s primary mission is not scientific, but an instrument on the lander will allow scientists to measure the composition of nearby rocks.

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