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The Planetary Society BlogBy Emily LakdawallaImages from final phases of KaguyaJun. 25, 2009 | 17:16 PDT | Jun. 26 00:16 UTC
by 5thstar
Named after the Lunar princes of Japanese favorite folklore, Kaguya had circled the Moon since October 2007. Her operation ended on June 10, 2009 with a controlled crash to the designated area. The flash of the collision was observed by Anglo-Australian Observatory. JAXA has released two incredible high resolution videos on the YouTube JAXA channel. One is the crater Anaxagoras seen from 58 km above the surface. Note the feature of the crater wall, which seem to have collapsed into several pieces. The other is Gill crater, near where Kaguya crashed, seen 39 to 44 km above the surface. Kaguya's original orbit was about 100 km. JAXA lowered her orbit in February 2009 for closer observation of the Moon. NHK, Japan Broadcasting Corporation, who provided the high definition camera onboard Kaguya, featured a documentary program of new findings on the Moon tonight.
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