Space: A private company will store nearly 300 dialects on the moon
Japanese company ispace has teamed up with UNESCO to send a time capsule containing 275 human languages to the moon. This initiative aims to preserve part of our heritage in case a problem occurs on the ground.
Japanese company ispace, which One spacecraft recently broke a world record, again in the news. It has cooperated with the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) to Preserving an important part of our linguistic heritage During its upcoming lunar mission, Hakuto-R 2, which will send a robot to the surface of our natural satellite.
On this occasion, iSpace will place the memory disk on board the Resilience lunar lander, which is scheduled to be launched at the end of 2024. This storage system, developed by UNESCO, will contain 275 languages plus other cultural data.
ispace is already planning its next lunar mission
Julien Lamy, CEO of ispace-Europe, said: “ Preserving linguistic diversity and preserving culture are two important aspects of UNESCO's mission. We are very honored to announce this ispace's Hakuto-R 2 mission will contribute to the UNESCO Moon mission For the benefit of the whole world“.
However, ISPACE is not its first attempt at lunar missions. In reality, The Japanese company has already tried the process Through Hakuto-R's first mission, which was launched in December 2022. Unfortunately, not everything went as planned. In fact, during the landing attempt on April 25, 2023, the plane's on-board computer calculated an incorrect altitude measurement, What caused the device to malfunction?.
But ispace has no intention of giving up. In fact, the company is already planning its next mission, which will follow the one mentioned here, Hakuto-R 2. The third ispace mission will notably include Scientific payloads built by NASA As part of the agency's Commercial Lunar Payload Services (CLPS) program. This will also be sent ispace's Apex 1.0 lunar landerIt is a larger spacecraft whose payload is expected to reach 500 kg.
source : space.com
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