Article 6J51P Japan’s ‘moon sniper’ probe made incredibly accurate landing, but is now upside down

Japan’s ‘moon sniper’ probe made incredibly accurate landing, but is now upside down

by
Justin McCurry in Tokyo and agencies
from Science | The Guardian on (#6J51P)

Slim probe landed metres rather than kilometres from its target, but a rocket malfunction has left it in an undignified position

A Japanese spacecraft made a historic pinpoint" landing on the surface of the moon at the weekend, the country's space agency has said, but there is a slight snag: the images being sent back suggest the probe is lying upside-down.

Japan became only the fifth country to put a craft on the lunar surface - after the US, the Soviet Union, China and India - when its Smart Lander for Investigating Moon (Slim) touched down in the early hours of Saturday.

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