A Japanese moon explorer is up and running after several tense days without the sunlight it needs to generate power.
Japan’s first lunar mission hit its target with a precision touchdown on January 20 – but the probe landed the wrong way up, leaving its solar panels unable to access sunlight.
With the dawn of the lunar day, it appears that the lander has power.
The Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (Jaxa), said it successfully established communication with the probe on Sunday night, and the craft has resumed its mission, taking pictures of the moon’s surface and transmitting them to the Earth.
After a last-minute engine failure caused the Smart Lander for Investigating Moon (Slim) to make a rougher-than-planned landing, Jaxa used battery power to gather as much data as possible about the touchdown and the probe’s surroundings.
The craft was then turned off to wait for the sun to rise higher in the lunar sky in late January.
With power, Slim has continued its work to analyse the composition of olivine rocks on the lunar surface with its multi-band spectral camera, seeking clues about the moon’s origin and evolution, the agency said.
Earlier observations suggest that the moon may have formed when the Earth hit another planet.
A black-and-white photo posted by Jaxa on social media showed the rocky lunar surface, including a rock the agency said it had named “Toy Poodle” after seeing it in initial images. The probe is analysing six rocks, all of which have been given the names of dog breeds.
Slim is expected to have enough sunlight to continue operations for several earth days, possibly until Thursday. Jaxa said it is not clear if the craft will work again after another severely cold lunar night.
The craft landed about 60 yards away from its target, in between two craters near the Shioli crater, a region covered in volcanic rock. Previous moon missions have typically aimed for flat areas at least six miles wide.
Slim carried two autonomous probes, which were released just before touchdown, recording the landing, surroundings and other lunar data.
The landing made Japan the world’s fifth country to reach the moon’s surface, after the United States, the former Soviet Union, China and India.