PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

New results on the geologic characteristics of the Chang'E-3 exploration region

SCIENCE CHINA Physics, Mechanics & Astronomy

2014-01-27
(Press-News.org) Contact information: Guo Yuan-Yuan
guoyuanyuan@scichina.org
86-106-401-5835
Science China Press
New results on the geologic characteristics of the Chang'E-3 exploration region SCIENCE CHINA Physics, Mechanics & Astronomy

An article entitled "Geologic characteristics of the Chang'E-3 exploration region"was published online for SCIENCE CHINA Physics, Mechanics & Astronomy on January 21, 2014. It presents some new results on the geologic characteristics of the Chang'E-3 exploration region.

Chang'E-3 mission is the second step in China's lunar exploration program. It has achieved the desired engineering goals by successfully soft landing on the lunar surface. Now people are expecting the lander and rover to send back more and better scientific data which is believed to help fulfill its scientific aims and further our understanding of the Moon.

Chang'E-3 landed successfully in the northern part of Mare Imbrium which had never been visited by any lunar landers or rovers. Chinese planetary scientists are now working on the detailed geological interpretation of the exploration area using multi-source data. With morphological and geological analysis, they hope to nail down the major scientific problems for the target area and the scientific discoveries that could be made, thus laying a scientific foundation for the planning of the lunar exploration. Under the leadership of

Professor Long Xiao from China University of Geosciences (Wuhan), a team of young planetary scientists including Jiannan Zhao, Jun Huang and others have mapped the exploration area and acquired large amounts of information on topography, geomorphology, geologic structure and composition of the landing site and its adjacent region. These results will be published in SCIENCE CHINA Physics, Mechanics & Astronomy, Vol. 54, No. 3, 2014 (pages 569).

In this work, the authors studied the geologic characteristics of the Chang'E-3 exploration region, and produced a geologic map of a 1°×1° region centered near the landing site. They also analyzed the topography and slope using the Digital Terrain Model generated from Terrain Camera (TC) images. The exploration region is overall relatively flat and the altitude of the landing site is about 2610 m. The morphology and classification of the impact craters and wrinkle ridges in the area were studied, and the wrinkle ridges were supposed to have different formation mechanisms. After calculating FeO and TiO2 abundances using Multiband Imager (MI) data, two basaltic units are confirmed: the northern part belongs to Imbrian low-Ti/very-low-Ti mare basalts, and the middle to southern part is Eratosthenian low-Ti/high-Ti mare basalts. In addition the thickness of the Eratosthenian basaltic units was estimated, and two traverses for Yutu rover were proposed, laying a scientific basis for the planning of the lunar exploration.

At this moment, Chang'E-3 is conducting its second and third lunar day exploration work as planned, and all the scientific payloads are in good condition. We hope that the Team of Core Scientists on Chang'E-3 Mission Scientific Data Application and Study would make a best use of the newly acquired data to thoroughly study the landing area, and make more discoveries in morphology, geologic structure, material composition and subsurface structure.



INFORMATION:

See the article:

Cite | ZHAO J N, HUANG J, QIAO L, et al. Geologic characteristics of the Chang'E-3 exploration region. SCIENCE CHINA Physics, Mechanics & Astronomy, 2014, 57(3): 569-576.

PDF (5088KB): http://phys.scichina.com:8083/sciGe/fileup/PDF/11433_OF_13_5399.pdf

Science China Press Co., Ltd. (SCP) is a scientific journal publishing company of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS). For 60 years, SCP takes its mission to present to the world the best achievements by Chinese scientists on various fields of natural sciences researches.

http://www.scichina.com



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

300,000-year-old hearth found

2014-01-27
Humans, by most estimates, discovered fire over a million years ago. But when did they really begin to control fire and use ...

Shadowy world of Britain's discount hitmen revealed in new study

2014-01-27
Contract killing is one of the least studied, but most intriguing areas of organized crime; and new research into British hitmen has found that in some cases victims were murdered for as little as £200. The ...

Punctured cell membranes lead to high blood pressure

2014-01-27
Researchers from the University of Southern Denmark have identified how a mutated protein can lead to holes in a protein sitting in a cell's membrane. Such holes cause high blood pressure, and the discovery can now lead ...

Magnetic switch gets closer to application

2014-01-27
This news release is available in German. Scientists from Paris, Newcastle and Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin have been able to switch on and off robust ferromagnetism ...

New quantum dots herald a new era of electronics operating on a single-atom level

2014-01-27
New types of solotronic structures, including the world's first quantum dots containing single cobalt ions, have been created and studied at the Faculty ...

New biomedical diagnostics using personalized 3-D imaging

2014-01-27
This news release is available in Spanish. This innovation enables 3D images of living organisms to be obtained with greater speed and precision. In broad terms, helical optical projection tomography consists in ...

IOF position paper reveals enormous variation in worldwide usage of FRAX

2014-01-27
Nyon, Switzerland ...

App may signal cellphone dependency

2014-01-27
A new, free app will allow smartphone users to measure their cellphone use. Computer scientists and psychologists from the University of ...

Unique specimen identifiers link 10 new species of ant directly to AntWeb

2014-01-27
A team of scientists from the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles and the University of California at Davis describe ten new species of Temnothorax ants, doubling the number of species of this ...

How did we get 4 limbs? Because we have a belly

2014-01-27
This news release is available in German. All of us backboned animals – at least the ones who also have jaws – have four fins or limbs, one pair in front ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Emotive marketing for sustainable consumption?

Prostate cancer is not a death knell, study shows

Unveiling the role of tumor-infiltrating immune cells in endometrial carcinoma

Traditional Chinese medicine unlocks new potential in treating diseases through ferroptosis regulation

MSU study pinpoints the impact of prenatal stress across 27 weeks of pregnancy

Biochemist’s impact on science and students honored

ELF4: A key transcription factor shaping immunity and cancer progression

Updated chronic kidney disease management guidelines recommend SGLT2 inhibitors regardless of diabetes or kidney disease type

New research explores how AI can build trust in knowledge work

Compound found in common herbs inspires potential anti-inflammatory drug for Alzheimer’s disease

Inhaled COVID vaccine begins recruitment for phase-2 human trials

What’s in a label? It’s different for boys vs. girls, new study of parents finds

Genes combined with immune response to Epstein-Barr virus increase MS risk

Proximity and prejudice: Gay discrimination in the gig economy

New paper suggests cold temperatures trigger shapeshifting proteins

Reproductive justice–driven pregnancy interventions can improve mental health

Intranasal herpes infection may produce neurobehavioral symptoms, UIC study finds

Developing treatment strategies for an understudied bladder disease

Investigating how decision-making and behavioral control develop

Rutgers researchers revive decades-old pregnancy cohort with modern scientific potential

Rising CO2 likely to speed decrease in ‘space sustainability’ 

Study: Climate change will reduce the number of satellites that can safely orbit in space

Mysterious phenomenon at center of galaxy could reveal new kind of dark matter

Unlocking the secrets of phase transitions in quantum hardware

Deep reinforcement learning optimizes distributed manufacturing scheduling

AACR announces Fellows of the AACR Academy Class of 2025 and new AACR Academy President

TTUHSC’s Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences hosts 37th Student Research Week

New insights into plant growth

Female sex hormone protects against opioid misuse, rat study finds

Post-Dobbs decision changes in obstetrics and gynecology clinical workforce in states with abortion restrictions

[Press-News.org] New results on the geologic characteristics of the Chang'E-3 exploration region
SCIENCE CHINA Physics, Mechanics & Astronomy