An image captured by NASA’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter shows the Chang’e 4 landing site from a distance of over 200 miles, revealing both the probe and the desolate lunar landscape around it.
We know the Moon is dead and dark, but wow does this black-and-white photograph ever drive that message home. China’s Chang’e 4 lander appears as a two-pixel-wide speck in the NASA photo, providing an incredible sense of scale. Earth has its fair share of barren landscapes, but there’s something truly dreary and forbidding about the Moon. It’s just so... alien.
When the Chang’e 4 spacecraft made it to the Moon’s far side in early January, it landed on the floor of the Von Kármán crater, a feature named in honor of Theodore von Kármán—a pioneering scientist during the early days of the U.S. space program. This large impact crater formed about 3.9 billion years ago, and it measures around 186 kilometers (116 miles) in diameter.
On January 30, 2019, NASA’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter approached the landing site from the east, snapping the pic at a distance of 330 kilometers (205 miles) from the Chang’e 4 lander. The Chinese probe appears as a tiny white dot, and its mobile companion, the Yutu 2 rover, is so small it cannot be seen.
The large, fresh-looking crater beyond the landing site measures nearly 4 kilometers across, or 12,800 feet, and it’s about 600 meters (1,970 feet) deep, according to NASA. Looking across the expanse, you can see the western wall of the Von Kármán crater—a mountain range that extends more than 3 kilometers (9,850 feet) above the floor of the crater.
A zoomed-in photo (above) of the landing site shows the scene in more detail, including a large crater (just to the right of the arrows) near Chang’e 4 measuring around 440 meters (1,440 feet) across.
As a fun aside, this isn’t the first time that NASA has used its orbiter to spot a Chinese lander on the Moon. In December 2013, the LRO spotted the Chang’e 3 lander and the Yutu rover from a distance of 150 kilometers (93 miles). Chang’e 3 landed on the Moon’s near side, but it stopped functioning shortly after landing.
[NASA]
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