As China gears up to bring astronauts to the moon, the first human return to lunar orbit since the Apollo era over 50 years ago could offer Beijing valuable technical insights.
Quentin Parker, a professor of astrophysics at the University of Hong Kong, described China as watching the Artemis 2 mission “like a hawk”.
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Parker said China and other interested spacefaring countries would be “looking attentively at everything they can glean from all the experiences of the Artemis crew and the Artemis mission”.
On Wednesday local time, the Space Launch System carrying the Orion spacecraft and a four-member Artemis 2 crew took off from US space agency Nasa’s Kennedy Space Centre in Florida for a 10-day trip around the moon.
