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China denies rocket set for moon crash was from 2014 Chang’e 5-T1 mission

  • The object is predicted to hit the moon next month, but Beijing says its rocket had re-entered the Earth’s atmosphere and burned up
  • Foreign ministry says China follows international law over space development

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The rocket was launched in 2014. Photo: AP
China’s foreign ministry on Monday denied a US report that a spent rocket booster forecast to crash on the far side of the moon next month was debris from a Chinese lunar mission in 2014.
The rocket booster, expected to crash on the moon on March 4, was initially identified by an independent researcher as a used Falcon rocket stage from Elon Musk’s SpaceX.

However, earlier this month the US National Aeronautics and Space Administration said its analysis showed that the object was likely to be the booster rocket from China’s Chang’e 5-T1 mission launched in 2014.

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China launched the uncrewed Chang’e 5-T1 spacecraft to the moon in October 2014 on a Long March 3C rocket, which has three stages.

The mission was to test the ability of the spacecraft’s capsule to re-enter Earth’s atmosphere. The capsule landed back on Earth that same month.

“According to China’s monitoring, the Chang’e 5 [rocket] has safely entered Earth’s atmosphere, and has completely burned,” said Wang Wenbin, a Chinese foreign ministry spokesman, when asked by reporters if the object was from the Chinese mission.

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