<p>South Korea joined the stampede to the moon with the launch of a lunar orbiter that will scout out future landing spots.</p>.<p>The satellite launched by SpaceX on Thursday is taking a long, roundabout path to conserve fuel and will arrive in December.</p>.<p>If successful, it will join spacecraft from the US and India already operating around the moon, and a Chinese rover exploring the moon's far side.</p>.<p>India, Russia and Japan have new moon missions launching later this year or next, as do a slew of private companies in the US and elsewhere. And NASA is next up with the debut of its mega moon rocket in late August.</p>.<p>South Korea's USD 180 million mission — the country's first step in lunar exploration — features a boxy, solar-powered satellite designed to skim just 100 km above the lunar surface.</p>.<p>Scientists expect to collect geologic and other data for at least a year from this low polar orbit.</p>.<p>It is South Korea's second shot at space in six weeks.</p>.<p>In June, South Korea successfully launched a package of satellites into orbit around Earth for the first time using its own rocket. The first try last fall fizzled, with the test satellite failing to reach orbit.</p>.<p>And in May, South Korea joined a NASA-led coalition to explore the moon with astronauts in the coming years and decades. NASA is targeting the end of this month for the first launch in its Artemis programme.</p>.<p>The goal is to send an empty crew capsule around the moon and back to test the systems before a crew climbs aboard in two years.</p>.<p>Danuri — Korean for “enjoy the moon" — is carrying six science instruments, including a camera for NASA. It's designed to peer into the permanently shadowed, ice-filled craters at the lunar poles.</p>.<p>NASA favors the lunar south pole for future astronaut outposts because of evidence of frozen water.</p>.<p>South Korea plans to land its own spacecraft on the moon — a robotic probe — by 2030 or so.</p>.<p>SpaceX's Falcon 9 rocket carrying Danuri took off from Cape Canaveral close to sunset. It was the third spaceshot of the day from the US.</p>.<p>United Launch Alliance kicked things off at sunrise in Florida, launching an Atlas V rocket with an infrared missile-detection satellite for the US Space Force.</p>.<p>Then Jeff Bezos' Blue Origin rocket company sent six passengers on a quick ride to space from West Texas.</p>.<p>Across the world, the company Rocket Lab launched a small classified satellite from New Zealand for the US National Reconnaissance Office. </p>
<p>South Korea joined the stampede to the moon with the launch of a lunar orbiter that will scout out future landing spots.</p>.<p>The satellite launched by SpaceX on Thursday is taking a long, roundabout path to conserve fuel and will arrive in December.</p>.<p>If successful, it will join spacecraft from the US and India already operating around the moon, and a Chinese rover exploring the moon's far side.</p>.<p>India, Russia and Japan have new moon missions launching later this year or next, as do a slew of private companies in the US and elsewhere. And NASA is next up with the debut of its mega moon rocket in late August.</p>.<p>South Korea's USD 180 million mission — the country's first step in lunar exploration — features a boxy, solar-powered satellite designed to skim just 100 km above the lunar surface.</p>.<p>Scientists expect to collect geologic and other data for at least a year from this low polar orbit.</p>.<p>It is South Korea's second shot at space in six weeks.</p>.<p>In June, South Korea successfully launched a package of satellites into orbit around Earth for the first time using its own rocket. The first try last fall fizzled, with the test satellite failing to reach orbit.</p>.<p>And in May, South Korea joined a NASA-led coalition to explore the moon with astronauts in the coming years and decades. NASA is targeting the end of this month for the first launch in its Artemis programme.</p>.<p>The goal is to send an empty crew capsule around the moon and back to test the systems before a crew climbs aboard in two years.</p>.<p>Danuri — Korean for “enjoy the moon" — is carrying six science instruments, including a camera for NASA. It's designed to peer into the permanently shadowed, ice-filled craters at the lunar poles.</p>.<p>NASA favors the lunar south pole for future astronaut outposts because of evidence of frozen water.</p>.<p>South Korea plans to land its own spacecraft on the moon — a robotic probe — by 2030 or so.</p>.<p>SpaceX's Falcon 9 rocket carrying Danuri took off from Cape Canaveral close to sunset. It was the third spaceshot of the day from the US.</p>.<p>United Launch Alliance kicked things off at sunrise in Florida, launching an Atlas V rocket with an infrared missile-detection satellite for the US Space Force.</p>.<p>Then Jeff Bezos' Blue Origin rocket company sent six passengers on a quick ride to space from West Texas.</p>.<p>Across the world, the company Rocket Lab launched a small classified satellite from New Zealand for the US National Reconnaissance Office. </p>