The Japanese Japanese Monthly Rosilience, just two weeks before his historic landing effort, provided us with a beautiful picture of the moon.
According to RCO News Agency, ISPACE based in Tokyo, which manufactures and manages resilings, shared an image on the X -Social network that the probe recorded from the Antarctica area of the month.
According to Space, Rosilins took this photo of the moon from the moon’s orbit and depicts the roughness of many geological features of the moon. This image creates a vision error for some, and although the image is full of concave spans, it may seem convex.
Rosilins was launched on January 5 on the Falcon -SpaceX missile, which also carried another private monthly. The Blue Ghost of Firefly Iruspis also boarded the missile.
The Blue Ghost landed on the moon on March 2 and became the second commercial vehicle to successfully experience soft down on the moon. Resileins, the second -lane ISPI, took a longer, loop and optimal energy consumption path to the nearest neighbor of the earth, and eventually reached the moon orbit on May 5.
Japan‘s private probe was photographed from the moon before the historic landing” height=”366″ src=”https://cdn.isna.ir/d/2025/05/24/0/63471213.png?ts=1748082775878″ width=”650″/>
The Japanese moon is due to land on June 5 in a volcanic plain in the northern hemisphere of the moon. Success will be great for ISPIS and Japan; It has only one landing on the moon in its record.
Rosilins carries five scientific and technology cargoes to the moon, including a miniature rover named Smellius.
Built by the European Subsidiary Company, this small wheelchair robot will try to collect the moon under a contract signed with NASA in year 6.
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(tagstotranslate) Japanese private probe
RCO NEWS



