Lunar surface image of the Slim spacecraft rotated 90 degrees from how it should be. The picture was taken by small robot LEV-2 SORA-Q (Photo released by JAXA / SWNS)

It’s a case of five alive for the Japanese space program, when their craft, which was set to make them the fifth nation to land on the Moon, seemed to have been lost after a wonky landing.

Landing on its side with its solar panels pointing away from the Sun, the small lander was shut down for days, and this mistake nearly cost the mission everything.

But as has been the case with the recent history of spacefaring, the problem was resolved, and the Smart Lander for Investigating Moon or “SLIM” made Japan the fifth nation after the USA, Soviet Union, China, and India to achieve a soft landing on our nearest body.

Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) posted on X that a change in the lighting conditions allowed the solar panels to recharge the batteries, which had been shut off by authorities in the early hours of the start of the mission on January 20th.

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It’s a good thing too because the spacecraft pulled off what JAXA described as an “unprecedented pinpoint landing” of 180 feet of the targeted area, the highest precision landing ever achieved on the Moon, and an achievement that would have been hard to boast about if the craft had landed on its side, immediately lost power, and died.

A picture of the Lunar surface from SLIM, featuring a rock close at hand which JAXA referred to as a “toy poodle” – JAXA, via SWNS

In fact, the technology used to land SLIM could bring craft down safely onto Lunar hilltops, which are theorized as perfect places to look for various chemicals like oxygen and hydrogen to fuel the production of water and air for astronauts in the future.

Late last year, India’s Chandrayaan-3 rover mission touched down on the Moon’s south pole—an area never seen or explored before, to rapturous celebrations in Earth’s most populous nation.

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