by Andrew Jones
December 05, 2021
from
Space Website
It's
likely a large boulder
excavated by
an ancient lunar
impact...
China's
Yutu 2 rover has spotted a mystery
object on the horizon while working its way across
Von Kármán crater on the far side of the moon.
Yutu 2 spotted a cube-shaped object on the horizon to the north and
roughly 260 feet (80 meters) away in November during the mission's
36th lunar day, according to a Yutu 2 diary
published by Our Space, a Chinese language science outreach channel affiliated
with the China National Space Administration (CNSA).
Our Space referred to the object as a "mystery hut" (神秘小屋/shenmi
xiaowu), but this a placeholder name rather than an accurate
description.
This zoomed-in image
shows a closer look at a cube shape
spotted by China's Yutu 2 rover
on the far side of the moon.
(Image credit: CNSA/Our Space)
Team scientists have expressed a strong interest in the object and
Yutu 2 is now expected to spend the next 2-3 lunar days (2-3 Earth
months) traversing lunar regolith and avoiding craters to get a
closer look, so updates can be expected.
A likely explanation for the shape would be a large boulder which
has been excavated by an impact event.
So yeah, it's not an obelisk or aliens, but certainly something to
check out, and hard to discern much from the image.
But large boulders
(above-right) are sometimes excavated by impacts, as seen by the
Chang'e-3 mission, which launched 8 years ago on Dec 1.
An image from China's Yutu 2
showing a cube-shaped object on the horizon
on the far side of the moon.
(Image credit: CNSA/Our Space)
The solar-powered Yutu 2 and
Chang'e 4 lander made the first ever
landing on the far side of the moon on Jan. 3, 2019, and the rover
has been rolling through the 115-mile-wide (186 kilometers) Von
Kármán crater ever since.
Chang'e 4, like its name suggests, is China's fourth moon mission
and second to deliver a rover on the moon.
The Chang'e 1 and 2
missions were orbiters, with Chang'e 3 landing on the near side of
the moon with the first Yutu rover...
China has also launched
the Chang'e 5 T1 test mission around the moon and the Chang'e 5 moon
sample return mission.
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