China become the third country to carry out a successful rover mission to the moon yesterday when its probe Chang'e-3 landed on the lunar surface, following the US and former Soviet Union.
"Space exploration is the cause of mankind, not just "the patent" of a certain country," state-run Xinhua news agency said in a commentary, apparently referring to the US.
"China will share the achievements of its lunar exploration with the whole world and use them to benefit humanity," it said.
"Open and self-confident, China, in its space exploration drive, also sincerely welcomes international cooperation for common progress," it said.
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"Chang'e-3's graceful landing, one of the three key stages of China's lunar programme featuring "cycle, land and return," made a historic breakthrough, leaving the achievements of her previous two sisters Chang'e-1 and Chang'e-2 far behind.
A small rove by Chang'e-3 on the moon demonstrated a big stride of China, it said.
The low success rate tells the difficulties of lunar exploration and landing, the commentary said.
The tougher thing is that China, as a newcomer in the world's deep space exploration club, has been adhering to self-innovation. Compared with her two previous sisters Chang'e-1 and Chang'e-2, 80 per cent of Chang'e-3's components and technologies are the latest, said Sun Zezhou, chief designer of the lunar probe.
"Soft landing" marks "hard success." In an unexplored area on the moon for scientific exploration, Chang'e-3 is not chasing fame in the "lunar landing club." She will release moon rover "Yutu" for mobile exploration, to advance human knowledge about the moon.