Chang'e 4
0 sources
Chang'e 4
Summary
Chang'e 4 is a lunar lander[1]. It ranks in the top 8% of lunar_lander entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (930 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Chang'e 4's instance of is recorded as lunar lander[3].
- Chang'e 4's instance of is recorded as artificial satellite[4].
- Chang'e 4 is operated by China National Space Administration[5].
- Chang'e is named after Chang'e 4[6].
- Chang'e 4 followed Chang'e 3[7].
- Chang'e 4 was followed by Chang'e 5[8].
- Chang'e 4 is part of Chinese Lunar Exploration Program[9].
- Chang'e 4's Commons category is recorded as Chang'e 4[10].
- Chang'e 4's space launch vehicle is recorded as Long March 3B[11].
- Chang'e 4's country of origin is recorded as People's Republic of China[12].
- Chang'e 4's type of orbit is recorded as halo orbit[13].
- Chang'e 4 comprises Netherlands-China Low-Frequency Explorer[14].
- Chang'e 4's UTC date of spacecraft launch is recorded as December 7, 2018[15].
- Chang'e 4's UTC date of spacecraft landing is recorded as January 3, 2019[16].
- Chang'e 4's significant event is recorded as rocket launch[17].
- Chang'e 4's significant event is recorded as Moon landing[18].
- Chang'e 4's significant event is recorded as surface exploration[19].
- Chang'e 4's location of landing is recorded as Statio Tianhe[20].
- Chang'e 4's start point is recorded as Xichang Satellite Launch Center[21].
- Chang'e 4's native label is recorded as {'lang': 'zh', 'text': '嫦娥四号'}[22].
- Chang'e 4's duration is recorded as {'unit': 'Q5151', 'amount': '+12'}[23].
Why It Matters
Chang'e 4 ranks in the top 8% of lunar_lander entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (930 views/month).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 25 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[24] It is known by 10 alternative names across languages and contexts.[25]