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    The Japanese “lunar sniper” was in trouble: he found himself in an “inappropriate” position

    The spacecraft landed accurately on the moon, but still poorly

    The Japanese “lunar sniper” probe made an incredibly accurate landing, but ended up turned upside down. The probe landed meters rather than kilometers from its intended target, but a rocket malfunction left it in an inappropriate position.

    The Japanese spacecraft made a historic “spot” landing on the lunar surface last weekend, the country's space agency said, but there's a slight catch: Images sent back to Earth show the probe lying upside down.

    According to The Guardian, Japan has become only the fifth country to launch a spacecraft onto the surface of the Moon – after the USA, Soviet Union, China and India, – when its intelligent lunar exploration lander (Slim) touched down early Saturday morning.

    Problems with the probe's solar panels initially made it difficult to determine whether it had landed in the intended area. But data obtained by the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (Jaxa) shows the probe landed 55 meters from its intended site, between two craters in a region covered in volcanic rock.

    Japanese officials said the landing was successful. with unprecedented precision. Most previous probes have targeted much wider landing zones, up to 10 kilometers wide – a reflection of the many challenges facing lunar landings 54 years after humans first set foot on the lunar surface.

    Space agency Jaxa said the probe would likely have been within three to four meters of its intended landing site if one of its main engines had not lost thrust during the final stages of its mission, resulting in a harder landing than expected. He was aiming at a target 100 meters wide.

    Still, space officials are describing the mission as a success despite the fact that the probe, nicknamed the “lunar sniper,” appears to have rolled down the side of the crater, leaving its solar panels oriented the wrong way and unable to generate electricity. .

    Jaxa said it prioritized transmitting landing data before the Slim ran out of battery. The agency said there is a chance the probe could recharge once the moon's western side begins receiving sunlight in the coming days.

    “We have proven that you can land where you want, not where you can,” Jaxa project manager Shinichiro Sakai told reporters. – We have opened the door to a new era.

    He said that the images sent were exactly what he had imagined. “Something we designed went all the way to the moon and took this picture. “I almost fell when I saw it,” he said, adding that Slim’s precise landing deserved “the highest score”.

    Images from one of two autonomous probes released by Slim ahead of landing show the main box-shaped vehicle on the lunar surface.

    One of the robots is equipped with an antenna and camera that recorded the probe's landing and transmitted images back to Earth. The second is a baseball-sized rover equipped with two cameras that was jointly developed by Jaxa, Japanese toy maker Tomy and Doshisha University.

    By analyzing the rocks, Jaxa hopes to shed light on the mystery of the Moon's possible water resources – key to establishing bases there as possible stopovers on the route to Mars.

    The Slim probe was launched in September and initially orbited Earth before entering lunar orbit on Christmas Day.

    Japan hopes the mission will reinvigorate its space program after a series of failures. A spacecraft developed by a Japanese company crashed during a lunar landing attempt in April, and the new flagship rocket failed on its debut launch in March.

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