As part of its space exploration plans, South Korea has launched its own lunar probe into space for the first time. A “Falcon 9” rocket from Elon Musk’s private space company SpaceX took off as scheduled on Thursday evening (local time) with the test lunar probe “Korea Pathfinder” on board from the Cape Canaveral Cosmodrome in the US state of Florida.
SpaceX broadcast the launch. After a journey of four and a half months through space, the orbiter – also known as “Danuri” – is to orbit the moon and from there collect data from the surface of the earth’s satellite.
South Korea’s Science Ministry confirmed that initial contact with the orbiter had been made after launch. Later it was said that “Danuri” had successfully swung into the planned trajectory towards its target. The orbiter is out this long to conserve fuel. It gets its energy from solar panels. In addition, he does not fly directly to the moon. It is scheduled to reach the planned orbit on December 16th.
The project, including the development of an unmanned space vehicle, is the result of cooperation between the Korean Space Research Institute (Kari) and other institutes in South Korea, as well as the US space agency Nasa. In order to fulfill the research tasks, the orbiter is equipped with six instruments including special cameras.
One task is also to explore possible landing sites on the moon, said a spokeswoman for the Ministry of Science. One of the goals of space exploration plans is to land on the moon by 2031. It has not yet been specified whether there will be an unmanned landing with a robot.
South Korea has an ambitious space program. In June, according to its own statements, it had successfully launched satellites for civilian use into orbit with a self-built launch vehicle.