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Danuri, South Korea’s first deep-space exploration mission, is finally arriving at the moon after a four-month voyage.
The Danuri spacecraft was expected to begin entering lunar orbit at on Friday (Dec. 17) at 2:45 p.m. EST (1945 GMT, 2:45 a.m. Dec. 17 in South Korea), according to a statement (opens in new tab) from the Korea Aerospace Research Institute (KARI). The maneuver, the first of five planned engine burns through Dec. 28 to refine Danuri’s orbit around the moon, will clear the way for the probe to get started on its lunar science objectives.
Danuri, also known as the Korea Pathfinder Lunar Orbiter (KPLO), began its long and circuitous journey to the moon on Aug. 4, launching on a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket from Florida’s Cape Canaveral Space Force Station. The moon probe has traveled over 3.3 million miles (5.4 million kilometers) on its journey so far, KARI officials have said.
Related: Every mission to the moon (reference)
The successful launch put Danuri into a ballistic lunar transfer orbit, which took the probe on a 134-day-long, looping, fuel-efficient voyage through Earth-moon space. It finally entered a polar lunar orbit with a target average altitude of 60 miles (100 kilometers) above the lunar surface.
The 1,495-pound (678 kilograms) KPLO is South Korea’s first exploration mission to go beyond Earth orbit. That $180 million mission is ambitious; Danuri packs six separate science payloads designed to gather data for a range of science objectives. Five of those instruments — a terrain imager, a Wide-Angle Polarimetric Camera, magnetometer, gamma-ray spectrometer and a new networking technology test payload — were developed by Korean universities and research organizations.
NASA also has a presence on board in the form of the sixth payload: a highly sensitive camera named ShadowCam that’s designed to scope out permanently shadowed regions at the lunar poles for hints of water-ice deposits. Data from the instrument could be helpful for NASA’s Artemis program, which aims to create a sustainable human presence on the moon.
After its first maneuver to enter orbit, Danuri is expected to follow it up with four more during moon approaches on Dec. 21, Dec. 23, Dec. 26 and Dec. 28 before settling into a final orbit on Dec. 29, KARI wrote in a statement (opens in new tab). All of those dates are in local time for South Korea.
KPLO is part of growing international interest in and activity at the moon. For example, Danuri reached the moon a month after the arrival of NASA’s CAPSTONE cubesat. The agency’s Artemis 1 mission successfully launched to lunar orbit and saw the Orion spacecraft return to Earth during the time Danuri was en route to the moon.
Danuri also marks the first step toward even grander lunar ambitions for South Korea, which also envisions a robotic moon landing around 2032 (opens in new tab) and a mission to Mars in 2045.
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