We've updated our Privacy and Cookies Policy
We've made some important changes to our Privacy and Cookies Policy and we want you to know what this means for you and your data.
Japan's Jaxa space agency achieves its first Moon landing
Japan's space agency Jaxa has made its first soft Moon landing with an unmanned spacecraft.
Jaxa attempted the nail-biting 20 minute landing at 15:30 GMT on Friday and live streamed the event on YouTube.
Only half of all attempts to land on the Moon have ever succeeded.
The live stream appeared to show the spacecraft, named Slim (Smart Lander for Investigating Moon), successfully touching down on the Moon, but there was a wait of more than an hour before this was confirmed.
Slim also released two tiny robotic probes to investigate the Moon's surface.
The probes were developed by Japanese toy maker Tomy and tech giant Sony.
One is the size of a basketball and was designed to roll across the ground taking pictures of the spacecraft.
The other probe is a similar size to a microwave and travels by hopping about like a frog.
Slim has sent back some data to Earth but was not expected to survive for very long after touchdown.
That's because it was designed to be powered by solar panels, which meant it would stop working when the Sun set.
However, the solar panels appear not to have been working at all after it landed.
As night falls the temperature rapidly drops to as low as minus 133 degrees Celsius near the Moon's equator, close to Slim's touchdown site.
The cold temperatures were expected to further damage the spacecraft and Jaxa planned to abandon it on the Moon's surface.
The last space agency to achieve a soft landing on the Moon was the Indian Space Research Organisation in August 2023.
Beyond these, only two other nations have achieved a soft Moon landing, they are the US and China.
In the history of space travel, only six missions have landed humans on the Moon, the first being in 1969.
To date, the United States is the only country that has managed to successfully land humans on the Moon.