
December 14, 2013
On the evening of 14 December 2013, with the descent broadcast live on Chinese television, a spacecraft did something no machine had done in 37 years: it landed softly on the Moon. Chang'e 3, named for the goddess who lives there in Chinese myth, dropped toward northern Mare Imbrium on a throttleable engine, then paused. Hovering roughly a hundred metres up, its cameras scanned the ground, the computer rejected boulder fields and craters, and the lander translated sideways to a safer spot before settling onto the dust at 13:11 UTC. Not since the Soviet Luna 24 mission of August 1976 had anything arrived on the Moon intact.
Hours later, two ramps unfolded from the lander's flank and a six-wheeled rover rolled down onto the regolith. Yutu, the Jade Rabbit, named through a public online poll after the rabbit who keeps the Moon goddess company, weighed about 140 kilograms and carried a design life of three months. China had become only the third nation to soft-land on the Moon, and the images of the gold-foiled lander and its little rover photographing each other under a black sky went around the world.
The science was quietly groundbreaking. The lander carried an ultraviolet telescope, the first long-duration astronomical observatory ever operated from the lunar surface, while Yutu's ground-penetrating radar profiled layered lava flows hidden hundreds of metres beneath Mare Imbrium. Yutu's drive system failed after its second lunar night following a short circuit, having covered 114 metres, but the immobilised rover kept transmitting for 31 months, ten times its design life, before falling silent in 2016.
Chang'e 3 was the opening move of a long game. Its backup spacecraft became Chang'e 4, the first lander on the lunar far side in 2019; Chang'e 5 brought back samples in 2020. A nation that had never touched the Moon in 2012 was, within a decade, setting the pace of lunar exploration.
Launch
1 Dec 2013, Long March 3B, Xichang
Landing
14 Dec 2013, 13:11 UTC
Landing site
Northern Mare Imbrium, 44.12° N
Lander mass
~1,200 kg (dry)
Yutu rover
~140 kg; 3-month design life, 31 months operated
Distance driven
114 m
It was the first soft landing on the Moon by any nation in 37 years; the previous one, Luna 24, happened before most of the Chang'e 3 engineering team was born.
The lander picked its own landing spot, hovering about 100 metres above the surface while onboard cameras scanned for boulders and craters, then sliding sideways to safer ground.
Yutu's name, Jade Rabbit, was chosen in a public online poll; in Chinese mythology the rabbit pounds the elixir of immortality for the Moon goddess Chang'e, making the lander-rover pair a myth made hardware.
When Yutu's mobility failed, Xinhua published farewell dispatches written in the rover's first-person voice; its 'Goodnight, Earth. Goodnight, humanity' sign-off moved millions of followers before the rover unexpectedly survived the night.
In 2015 the International Astronomical Union officially named the landing site Guang Han Gong, 'Moon Palace', the home of Chang'e in legend.
Chang'e 3 ended a 37-year drought in lunar surface exploration and made China only the third nation to soft-land on the Moon, validating the autonomous hazard-avoidance landing technology that every modern lunar lander now treats as essential. It transformed China's lunar program from orbital reconnaissance into a sustained surface campaign that produced the first far-side landing, robotic sample returns, and the foundations of an international research station plan. Strategically, it announced a second great lunar power and helped trigger the renewed global race to the Moon that defines this decade.
Institute of High Energy Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, CC BY 4.0
Official source