Chang'e 5 robotic probe plants China's national flag on moon's surface
Chang'e 5 robotic probe plants China's national flag on moon's surface. [Photo/CNSA]
The Chang'e 5 robotic probe has become China's first spacecraft to bring the country's national flag to an extraterrestrial body.
A small national flag was mounted on the multi-module probe's lander and was erected before Chang'e 5's ascender lifted itself into a lunar orbit. The scene of the five-starred red flag against the dark sky on the greyish lunar surface was taken by a camera on the lander and then transmitted to ground control.
In Chang'e 3 and 4 missions, the national flag was painted on the spacecraft. Therefore the one carried by Chang'e 5 is the first Chinese national flag that has been planted on the moon.
The system to raise the flag was designed and produced by engineers at China Space Sanjiang Group in Hubei province, a subsidiary of the State-owned China Aerospace Science and Industry Corp. It has three parts-a flag weighing 12 grams, an unleashing device and an unfolding instrument.
Ma Wei, the system's project manager, said that the system is exposed to a challenging environment on the lunar surface, so designers introduced multiple innovative designs and conducted many tests for reliability.
"For instance, the strong cosmic radiation and the extreme temperatures on the moon mean we could not use conventional fabrics. If we place an ordinary flag on the moon, its colors will quickly fade," he said."Designers spent more than one year selecting and testing ideal materials, and finally picked a new type of composite material that can resist the harsh conditions on the moon."
The spacecraft's weight control demand requires engineers to keep the flag system's total weight below 1 kg, in addition to it being strong and functional. They optimized its structural designs and made the supporting arm as light and thin as possible, Ma said.
From ChinaDaily