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Europe's 1st lunar mission set to land

Observatories will try to capture images of the impact and debris cloud

Image: SMART-1 solar-powered satellite
In this file photo of an artist's rendition, released by the European Space Agency, the European-made SMART-1 solar-powered satellite is seen nearing the Moon. Europe's first mission to the moon is due to crash-land in a cloud of dust and rock Sunday, after 3 years of travel.
European Space Agency via AP fil
By David McHugh
updated 12:18 p.m. ET Aug. 30, 2006

BERLIN - Europe's first mission to the moon is due to crash-land in a cloud of dust and rock Sunday, ending a three-year voyage that gathered data about the lunar surface and tested a new engine intended to propel future spacecraft to Mercury and other planets.

The European Space Agency's SMART-1 should hit its target on a volcanic plain called the Lake of Excellence at 1:41 a.m. ET, skimming low as it makes its final approach at 4,475 mph.

Observatories on earth will try to capture images of the impact and the resulting debris cloud, and European space officials hope their study of the debris will provide information about the minerals present at the impact site.

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Even before the mission ends, however, ESA is already celebrating the main goal — a successful test of the ion engine they hope to use for future interplanetary missions, such as the BepiColombo joint mission to Mercury with Japan's space agency slated for launch in 2013.

"The prime object of this mission was to test the ion propulsion," mission manager Gerhard Schwehm told The Associated Press.

"This is a very efficient means to get a spacecraft over large distances with a very small mass of fuel. It worked really well."

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Instead of burning rocket fuel, the PPS-1350 engine from French aerospace firm Snecma generates a stream of electrically charged atoms called ions. That creates minuscule amounts of thrust — roughly enough to hold up a postcard.

Riding that small, steady push, SMART-1 made it to the moon in 14 months, gradually accelerating and raising its orbit around the earth until it was high enough to be grabbed by the moon's gravity.

It was launched into earth orbit using an Ariane 5 rocket from the European spaceport in Kourou, French Guinea, on Sept. 27, 2003.

By contrast, the first mission to put humans on the moon, NASA's Apollo 11, took 76 hours to reach lunar orbit in 1969, hurled by a Saturn 5 rocket.


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