The “moon garden” onboard the Chang’e 4 probe has ended its operation as planned, and the data it collected will be “invaluable in improving the experiment and possibly make the moon habitable for humans”, the project’s chief engineer said.
Xie Gengxin, dean of the Institute of Advanced Technology at Chongqing University and chief designer of the experiment, told China Daily on Friday that the experiment was not meant to last over the lunar night, so they terminated their roughly 9-day test on Jan 12. China National Space Administration confirmed on Friday that the experiment had stopped.
The agency also confirmed shoots of cotton had sprouted in its special canister, marking the first live matter ever to be grown on the moon. After the experiment, the shoots would gradually decompose in their enclosed canisters, and would not affect the lunar environment, it said.
Six living things were placed inside the canister-cotton, rapeseed, potato, thale cress, yeast and fruit flies-aiming to form a simple yet self-sufficient micro-ecosystem in about a liter’s worth of growth space, the university said earlier. The plants were kept alive by sunlight on the moon’s surface redirected into the canister where they were growing.
However, when the lunar night came, Xie said the surface temperature could drop well below -100C, and the Chang’e 4 lunar lander had to enter “sleep mode” on Jan 13, so no power was available for the biological experiment.
Chang’e 4 was launched atop a Long March 3B rocket on Dec 8, and successfully landed on the moon on Jan 3. This is China’s fourth lunar mission and the world’s first-ever expedition on the moon’s far side, most of which never faces Earth.
The biological experiment was initially designed to last more than 100 days, but it required an additional power source like an external battery pack, Xie said. The battery was eventually scrapped to save valuable travel weight and space for the lunar probe, “which are completely valid reasons”.
Other cut equipment included cameras, so the team had to make do with fewer and less advanced cameras than they hoped. “Due to the limited and fixed camera angles, we only have an image proving the cotton sprout, and not the other organisms,” he said.
“It is a pity that we don’t have picture evidence of what happened to them,” he said. “But the data we’ve collected will be invaluable in improving the experiment and possibly make the moon habitable for humans,” he said.
Despite limited equipment and resources, Xie said he considered the experiment a success and “we’re happy to achieve what we did in such a short amount of time.”
“Growing the first living plant on the moon proves our experiment is feasible, and we have a good picture of how to expand and improve the project in the future,” he added.