With the US and NASA concentrating on Mars and moons of other planets, I thought interest in the moon was waning.
Apparently not.
"We want to investigate the moon, to know more about the whole of the moon," Keiji Tachikawa, president of the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency, said in this southern Indian city.
JAXA, as the agency is known, will carry out more robotic missions before a landing and astronaut on the moon, said Tachikawa in a brief interview Monday.
Missions to the moon and to Mars and international cooperation top the agenda of a five-day global conference in Hyderabad that brought together 2,000 space professionals, including scientists, astronomers and astronauts.
"There is a great revival of interest in exploring various planets," said Sun Laiyan, head of the China National Space Administration.
Via Kurzweil.AI
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