We have been closely following the progress of Chang'e-4, the Chinese Moon lander that touched down on the far side of the Moon last week and released a rover called Yutu 2.
We have been closely following the progress of Chang'e-4, the Chinese Moon lander that touched down on the far side of the Moon last week and released a rover called Yutu 2.
As the first soft landing on the far side of the Moon in history, the mission was a coup for the Chinese space program.
But reporting by Bloomberg suggests that the Chinese government could have an ulterior motive: scoping out whether the Moon contains an isotope the nation could used to fuel interplanetary missions.
The fuel in question is helium-3, the non-radioactive isotope featured in the 2009 Duncan Jones film Moon. Lunar regolith may be rich in helium-3, which could theoretically be a compelling source of fusion energy - or even power next-generation fusion rockets.
That's all far in the future, but that doesn't mean space pioneers in China don't have their eyes on the prize.
"China thinks in decades," Clive Neal, a lunar expert at the University of Notre Dame, told Bloomberg.
"The US thinks in presidential terms."
As the first soft landing on the far side of the Moon in history, the mission was a coup for the Chinese space program.
But reporting by Bloomberg suggests that the Chinese government could have an ulterior motive: scoping out whether the Moon contains an isotope the nation could used to fuel interplanetary missions.
The fuel in question is helium-3, the non-radioactive isotope featured in the 2009 Duncan Jones film Moon. Lunar regolith may be rich in helium-3, which could theoretically be a compelling source of fusion energy - or even power next-generation fusion rockets.
That's all far in the future, but that doesn't mean space pioneers in China don't have their eyes on the prize.
"China thinks in decades," Clive Neal, a lunar expert at the University of Notre Dame, told Bloomberg.
"The US thinks in presidential terms."