China's Tianwen-2 Reaches 12.5 Miles From Kamo'oalewa, Captures First Clear Photo
Updated
Updated · Futurism · Jul 13
China's Tianwen-2 Reaches 12.5 Miles From Kamo'oalewa, Captures First Clear Photo
3 articles · Updated · Futurism · Jul 13
Summary
Tianwen-2 has closed to 12.5 miles from Kamo'oalewa after a 400-day, 620 million-mile journey, giving China the first close approach to the quasi-moon and the first clear image of it.
The probe will now spend most of a year flying alongside the asteroid to map its composition and structure before attempting to collect surface material.
Sample retrieval is unusually difficult because Kamo'oalewa is only a few dozen feet across and spins about once every 30 minutes, forcing the nearly two-ton spacecraft to maneuver with extreme precision.
China plans to use both touch-and-go and an "anchor-and-attach" technique; a successful return would make it the third country to bring back asteroid samples and potentially the first to do so with the anchoring method.
Kamo'oalewa, discovered in 2016, is one of seven known quasi-moons and the smallest object yet visited by a spacecraft, making the mission a high-stakes test of China's deep-space capabilities.
After conquering a tiny, fast-spinning asteroid, what bolder deep-space objectives can China's new technology now achieve?
As China drills into Earth's 'second moon,' will samples prove it is a lost lunar fragment or a common asteroid?
Is China’s novel 'anchor-and-attach' technique a game-changer for asteroid mining, sparking a new resource race in space?
Tianwen-2’s 2026 Kamoʻoalewa Encounter: First Close-Up, Sample Return, and China’s Dual-Target Deep Space Breakthrough
Overview
In July 2026, Tianwen-2 reached Kamoʻoalewa, giving humanity its first close-up views of this mysterious quasi-satellite. These images offered unprecedented insights into Kamoʻoalewa’s characteristics and possible origin. The mission’s arrival enabled detailed mapping and set the stage for a sampling attempt planned for late July or early August. Both mapping and sampling are crucial steps to understand this unique object. However, Kamoʻoalewa’s rapid rotation, completing a full spin every 28 minutes, presents immediate challenges for the Tianwen-2 team as they prepare for these important operations.