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Copyright © 2024 CGTN. 京ICP备20000184号
Disinformation report hotline: 010-85061466
China's Chang'e-6 is now back on terra firma with the first ever rock samples taken from the dark side of the moon. As well as Chinese technology, the mission involved cooperation with scientists from France, Sweden, Italy and the European Space Agency. So what does this mean for future lunar missions, and further international cooperation in space?
To find out, in this episode of The Agenda, Juliet Mann speaks to Andrew Coates, Professor of Physics in the Department of Space and Climate Physics at UCL, Clive Neal, Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering and Earth Sciences at Notre Dame and, to get a view from someone who's actually been into orbit above the earth, Yi So-yeon, South Korea's first astronaut.
FIND MORE STORIES FROM THE AGENDA HERE