A set of rockets left behind after a launch will hit the Moon on March 4, 2022 at a speed of about 5,700 mph. It will leave a crater on the lunar surface.
But unlike my previous stories published on January 27, 2022 and February 3, 2022, the object now appears to be of Chinese origin and not from a SpaceX launch as reported.
Ironically, it now appears that the object came from a Chinese project to regress in a lunar rock pattern so that scientists understand why the Moon has so many craters.
Bill Gray of Project Pluto, software that tracks near-Earth objects, has published a correction to his initial claim that the doomed object component of a SpaceX Falcon nine rocket was introduced on Feb. 11, 2015 to put a NASA satellite into Earth orbit.
Gray now says he believes the object originated at the launch of the China National Space Administration’s (CNSA) Chang’e 5-T1 lunar project in October 2014.
“I am convinced that the object about to hit the Moon on March 4, 2022 at 12:25 UTC is at the level of the Chang’e 5-T1 rocket,” Gray writes.
Chang’e 5-T1, an experimental project to test a capsule as it re-enters earth’s environment before the full Chang’e-5 project, the first pattern reversal project in forty-five years. Sure enough, it supports valuable lunar rock patterns to Earth in 2020.
The recovered lunar rock samples are two billion years old, making them the youngest moon rock scientists. The samples show that the Moon has been active much longer than previously thought.
The stray object, the third-stage thruster of a Long March 3C rocket, introduced from the Xichang Satellite Launch Center on October 23, 2014.
It is now in a highly elliptical Earth orbit that takes it beyond the distance of the Moon. On March 4, 2022, it will crash into the appearance of the Moon.
It is possible that the crater it causes could be photographed by NASA’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) and India’s Chandrayaan-2, either orbiting the Moon.
I wish you a transparent sky and big eyes.
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