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Some images of separation from mission control [OurSpace]. pic.twitter.com/D89Ycobvz1
— Andrew Jones (@AJ_FI) November 30, 2020
#ChangE5 is going to land around noon Dec 1st, UTC.
Love this gif. The lunar lander is separated with orbiter in the lower lunar orbit. #ChangE5 is going to land around noon Dec 1st, UTC. good luck. @Cosmic_Penguin @planet4589 @DJSnM @SpacesFuture @AJ_FI pic.twitter.com/csrK8e0g47
— Ruohong Zhao (@rhZhao) November 30, 2020
Info #Space: What a great work. This message means Chang'e-5 performed it last two maneuver 18:22 & 14:23 UTC successful before final descent to moon surface. So a landing at 1st December at 15:13 UTC is close! #Change5 https://t.co/q6qaCc3RiF pic.twitter.com/xmJEx4jBC9
— Info Shymkent (@infoshymkent) November 30, 2020
I've made sense out of the @Change5 lander data (I think!). If I'm correct at 14:53UTC the lander changed orbit to 19x217km. Two full revs later at 18:22UTC (T=7170s from mission event flyer) the lander would have burned to enter 19x78km, T=6772s as observed by Edgar Kaiser.
— Scott Tilley 🇺🇦 🇨🇦 (@coastal8049) November 30, 2020
Where did #Change5 orbiter go after the first phasing burn? Back up to a near circular 217x219km orbit with a period of 7758s. The symmetry of the Doppler curve supports a very circular orbit. I guess this is where lunar chauffeurs hang out while the party is on the Moon. pic.twitter.com/AVivoHAo0K
— Scott Tilley 🇺🇦 🇨🇦 (@coastal8049) December 1, 2020
Chinese Media confirms successful landing of Chang'e-5! #change5 #moonlanding pic.twitter.com/0X5nKj3qHp
— Info Shymkent (@infoshymkent) December 1, 2020
CCTV-13 just ran this. #China #Moon #Change5 pic.twitter.com/gxXBNr7mz6
— Jonathan Amos (@JCDAmos) December 1, 2020
New images from the Moon [CNSA/CLEP] pic.twitter.com/X99nVk0mHj
— Andrew Jones (@AJ_FI) December 1, 2020
More images from the moon made by Chang'e 5 lander. pic.twitter.com/3BGGIwy0w7
— @Rupprecht_A (@RupprechtDeino) December 2, 2020
Here is lunar landing video composed by 635 frames sent by Chang'E 5 lander. The camera has twice pixel than previous Chang'E 3 and 4. The lens is also wider than previous mission.
— Ruohong Zhao (@rhZhao) December 2, 2020
Screen Recorded from CCTV live feed. pic.twitter.com/Y7whmweq56
Launch!!!!!
— Scott Tilley 🇺🇦 🇨🇦 (@coastal8049) December 3, 2020
#Change5 ascent stage in lunar orbit it appears. pic.twitter.com/sFjAWcY4Hj
— Scott Tilley 🇺🇦 🇨🇦 (@coastal8049) December 3, 2020
And off it goes, as seen from the descent stage:https://t.co/GJ888kQHdu
— Cosmic Penguin (@Cosmic_Penguin) December 3, 2020
Et ça revient par intermittence. Clairement l'engin bouge et essaye de verrouiller sa porteuse. De loin, je dirais plutôt bon signe. pic.twitter.com/GPM6dLi5Xg
— Techniques Spatiales - French Space Guy (@TechSpatiales) December 3, 2020
LRO has found Chang'e 5 on the Moon. https://t.co/7e84ai2XYl pic.twitter.com/r1PNtr9qL6
— Space Initiatives (@AsteroidEnergy) December 4, 2020
Info #Space: Get ready for the 1st autonomous moon orbit rendezvous in #moon orbit! The maneuver will be performed by Chang'e-5 orbiter & ascent vehicle and starts in 5 hours (18:13 UTC, 00:13 Almaty time, 19:13 CET, 13:13 ET). Read more here: https://t.co/Sndn0IBJvc #ChangE5 pic.twitter.com/aqx0VRpVk6
— Info Shymkent (@infoshymkent) December 5, 2020
There's now a full fabric PRC flag planted on the surface of the Moon after it was deployed from one side of Chang'e 5's descent stage just before ascent stage's launch.
— Cosmic Penguin (@Cosmic_Penguin) December 4, 2020
Whatever your opinions on the PRC are, this photo definitely has significant meanings in spaceflight history. pic.twitter.com/um1xR2brRg
So here it is, Chang'e 5's Ascending Stage and Orbiter's docking and lunar sample container transfer, the 1st of infinite automatic docking of 2 spacecraft and robotic transfer of things outside of Earth's orbit in spaceflight history.https://t.co/flB4XBFrrY
— Cosmic Penguin (@Cosmic_Penguin) December 6, 2020
Separation was at 04:35 UTC, exactly as on the leaked timeline reported several days ago.
— Cosmic Penguin (@Cosmic_Penguin) December 6, 2020
Unfortunately the leak ends here and we are back to looking for hints for the TEI burn (2 burns reported to be on Dec. 13/14) up to landing (~Dec. 16 UTC).https://t.co/giqNG5TinD
A great image here from the Chang'e-5 orbiter, showing the approaching ascent vehicle and a crescent Earth. CNSA/CLEP. pic.twitter.com/vpMF5ERd9D
— Andrew Jones (@AJ_FI) December 5, 2020
Separation of the orbiter and return vehicle from the ascender.
— LaunchStuff (@LaunchStuff) December 6, 2020
(cleaner footage re-upload)
📸:CNSA/CLEP
ℹ:https://t.co/tJbtz6TSNQ pic.twitter.com/SXIi9Ei42Y
Info #Space: Many sources (BBC, Global Times, ...) telling that the size of Chinese flag at Chang'e-5 lander is 200 x 90 cm. It can't be right... I would guess it's around 80 x 50 cm. #ChangE5 #flag #China pic.twitter.com/9WlzBDJkmA
— Info Shymkent (@infoshymkent) December 7, 2020
The Chang'e-5 ascent vehicle was deorbited at ~23:30 UTC yesterday, according to the China Lunar Exploration Program. It smashed into the Moon ~0 degrees longtitude and 30 degrees south. Job done, no extended mission. https://t.co/OVvWRNwXRK pic.twitter.com/c9YCJqiNNF
— Andrew Jones (@AJ_FI) December 8, 2020