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S. Korea 1st Lunar Orbiter Transported to US for August Launch

South Korea on Tuesday started transporting the country’s first lunar orbiter to the US ahead of next month’s launch using a SpaceX rocket, officials said.

South Korea plans to launch the Korea Pathfinder Lunar Orbiter, also known as Danuri, aboard the SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida at 8.24 a.m. on August 3, Yonhap reported.

According to the Ministry of Science and ICT, Danuri was sent from the Korea Aerospace Research Institute in Daejeon, 160 kilometers south of Seoul, to Incheon International Airport, west of Seoul, in a specially-designed container.

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The orbiter will be flown to the Orlando International Airport and arrive at the Florida space center on Thursday. It will later undergo maintenance, assembly, and other pre-launch preparations for about a month before launch, the report said.

Danuri will begin circling around the moon in December and conduct a year-long mission to observe it using an array of instruments, including cameras and magnetometers. It will also identify potential landing sites for future lunar missions.

Last month, South Korea successfully launched its first homegrown space rocket, Nuri, also known as KSLV-II, from the country’s southern coastal village of Goheung in a major milestone in the nation’s space program.

South Korea launched a preliminary feasibility study for the successor to the Nuri rocket, with the goal of sending a lunar landing module to the moon in 2031, the report said.

 

 

 

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