Scientists and astronomy enthusiasts all over the country all have access to
data sent back from China's first lunar orbiter Chang'e 1, a leading scientist
in the program said yesterday.
Ouyang Ziyuan, academician of the Chinese Academy of Sciences and chief
scientist of the lunar exploration program, said at present the scientific
instruments on board Chang'e 1 have all gone into operation and the satellite is
sending back 3 trillion of data per second. The total data volume will reach 28
T (1 T is equivalent to 1,000 G) next year.
"The money used for the
Chang'e project comes from the taxpayers and, therefore, the data should also be
made public. Any scientist or astronomy lover can apply to the state in
accordance with certain procedures to obtain data he needs," Ouyang said.
He also refuted rumors spread by some Chinese netizens that the first image
sent back by Chang'e 1 "copied the picture from the United States".
"Because China and the United States took the images in the same region,
it's natural the two pictures look alike. But through careful observation you
will see there are some nuances," he said.
He further explained that
scientist have already learned a lot of information from the first image. "We
can see many craters on the lunar surface, some are of bowl's shape, some are
center conical pits, and most of all, there are multi-loop pits. These craters
show that the moon has experienced different disasters."
China published
the first picture of the moon captured by Chang'e 1 last Monday, marking the
success of the country's first lunar probe project. The image showed a rough
moon surface with scattered round craters both big and small.