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Death of Soviet Union’s last leader, Mikhail Gorbachev, unearths Pizza Hut ad

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The commercial opens with a snowy view of Moscow’s Red Square, where a man and his granddaughter are en route to Pizza Hut. Once inside, other diners gape as Mikhail Gorbachev — the last leader of the Soviet Union, who helped end the Cold War — sits down for a slice.

Arguments ensue. In the minute-long, 25-year-old Pizza Hut ad — which resurfaced Tuesday after Russian news agencies announced that Gorbachev had died at 91 — fellow diners are divided on his legacy.

“Because of him, we have economic confusion!” an older man says. “Because of him, we have opportunity!” a younger man responds.

The 1997 ad was meant to be tongue-in-cheek, Tom Darbyshire, who wrote the commercial for the advertising agency BBDO, told The Washington Post. By tapping into the debate about Gorbachev’s legacy — a man seen as a hero abroad and a villain in Russia — the commercial sought to show that “pizza is one of those foods that brings people together and bridges their differences,” Darbyshire said.

But the commercial that made Pizza Hut trend on Twitter on Tuesday almost didn’t happen — and it didn’t even air in Russia. It took a year of negotiations to get Gorbachev to agree to it. He refused to eat pizza on camera — enlisting his granddaughter to do that instead. That bitter-cold morning they were set to shoot, he arrived late, Darbyshire recalled.

“We weren’t sure he was going to show up,” he said. “He was about an hour late, negotiations had been a little tense, and I think he was only doing it because he needed the money.”

The value of Gorbachev’s pension plummeted after the fall of the Soviet Union, Foreign Policy reported. Eliot Borenstein, a Russian and Slavic studies professor at New York University, said it’s “sad and ironic” that the former leader was so strapped for cash that he had to make the commercial — and that the only way Gorbachev got praise from Russians was through paid actors.

Despite the initial challenges, Darbyshire said, filming day was filled with touching moments. They filmed on Thanksgiving, and as the crew ate pizza instead of turkey, Gorbachev stood up and insisted on serving the slices, he recalled.

“On a day that we give thanks for all that we have in America, our freedoms and our plenty, for him to be making that symbolic gesture realizing that he was keeping us away from our families … was something I’ll never forget,” he said.

The final product reflects Gorbachev’s complicated legacy, said Jenny Kaminer, a professor of Russian at the University of California at Davis. The ad “lines up with how the different generations experienced the collapse of the Soviet Union,” she told The Post in an email.

For some, Gorbachev’s dual policies of glasnost (openness) and perestroika (restructuring) brought the promise of economic freedom. For others “who couldn’t adapt to the rapid transition to a market economy, it meant abject poverty, insecurity, and a humiliating loss of dignity,” Kaminer said. That division is similar to how Westerners view Gorbachev vs. Russians’ view of him, she added.

“More Russians, I would say, agree with the verdict of the older man [in the ad] who blames Gorbachev for creating chaos and instability, while Westerners cheer him for upholding our supposedly sacred liberal values of ‘freedom’ and ‘democracy,’ ” Kaminer said.

Biden, Putin and other leaders react to Mikhail Gorbachev death

University of Arizona professor Pat Willerton agrees.

“Russians saw somebody whose efforts led to the country’s collapse,” Willerton, a scholar of Russian politics, told The Post. “They saw somebody whose efforts accelerated an already deteriorating domestic, political, and socioeconomic situation. They saw a leader who was naive in the way he engaged the West. They feel that the West took full advantage of the efforts that he made and that they got themselves into an inferior power position.”

The diners in the Pizza Hut ad eventually come together when an elderly woman cuts through the bickering to interject: “Because of him we have many things like Pizza Hut!” Soon everyone’s raising a slice to chants of “Hail to Gorbachev!”

In reality, though, not everyone finds that common ground.

As The Post’s David E. Hoffman wrote, “The Soviet collapse was not Mr. Gorbachev’s goal, but it may be his greatest legacy. It brought to an end a seven-decade experiment born of Utopian idealism that led to some of the bloodiest human suffering of the century.” Still, Gorbachev’s daring moves proved to be a double-edged sword in a country that has historically valued strongmen.

Abroad, he induced “Gorbymania” — drawing big crowds that showered him with praise for easing what had been nerve-racking nuclear tensions. But at home, he became a persona non grata, consistently ranking among Russia’s most disliked leaders — even below Joseph Stalin, who ordered executions and forced people into labor camps.

“The diametrically opposed views are a reflection of the world we’re in,” Willerton said. “We’re in a completely divided world.”

A 2017 Pew Research Center poll found that more than two-thirds of Russians surveyed said the Soviet Union’s collapse was a bad thing. That number jumped among older Russians, according to the poll. In the same survey, 58 percent of Russians polled rated Stalin positively, while 22 percent rated Gorbachev positively.

How popular is Putin, really?

“In Russia, greatness has nothing to do with being nice; it has to do with being strong,” Willerton said. “That’s why a contemporary Russian seeing the ad would most probably think ‘Thank God we have [President Vladimir] Putin now after the mess Gorbachev left.’ ”

Stars Coffee opened its first location in Moscow on Aug. 18. The restaurant is nearly identical to Seattle-based Starbucks, which exited the country in May. (Video: Jackson Barton/The Washington Post)

Gorbachev was aware of the negative views from Russians. Initially, concerns about his legacy led him to decline starring in the ad, the Financial Times’s Madison Darbyshire wrote in 2019. He finally agreed when “after a spat with his successor, Boris Yeltsin, he suddenly needed new office real estate for his foundation,” according to Darbyshire, whose father is Tom Darbyshire.

That need for funds also led Gorbachev into agreeing to another now-viral-moment: a 2007 Louis Vuitton campaign shot by Annie Leibovitz. In it, the former statesman is featured in the back seat of a car with the Berlin Wall’s remains in the background.

Tuesday wasn’t the first time Gorbachev’s Pizza Hut ad made the rounds. The commercial has periodically found new audiences online even though it aired before the age of social media. It was shared widely earlier this year, amid talks about Pizza Hut’s leaving Russia over the country’s invasion of Ukraine.

Seeing the commercial resurface this week unlocked another memory for Darbyshire: the process of translating the script from English to Russian. After reading it, a Russian speaker told him, “We don’t really have a word for freedom in the way you think of freedom in America,’ ” Darbyshire said.

“That was an interesting idea, that freedom as we think of it is not even a word that they had a term for, because this is a country that perhaps was rushed into trying out democracy without putting all of the institutions in place,” he said.

Gorbachev would later see some of the freedoms celebrated in that commercial reversed under Putin. The pizza memes live on, though.



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Businesses are fleeing Russia. McDonald’s and Pizza Hut are sticking around.

As Western corporate titans flee their Russian connections — citing moral and economic imperatives — others, especially in food service and natural-resource-based industries, say they are stuck. McDonald’s, Starbucks, Papa John’s and Yum Brands — the conglomerate behind KFC and Pizza Hut — have all stayed mum on their plans for business in Russia after its invasion of Ukraine, as they come under growing pressure on social media and from large investors to quit Russia.

Dozens of marquee names have suspended operations — including Shell, BP and ExxonMobil — in response to the unprovoked attack that has devastated Ukraine and drawn international condemnation. But others are walking a finer line, such as French oil company TotalEnergies, which said it would halt new spending in Russia but maintain its partnerships there, including a nearly 20 percent stake in Russian gas producer Novatek.

Boeing, meanwhile, announced Monday that it would look elsewhere for the titanium it uses for its passenger jets, but it stopped short of pulling out of a joint venture to produce it. Russia’s metal industry — key to electric vehicles and semiconductor chips — is so dominant that analysts speculate it may be “too big to sanction.”

The moves show how deeply entrenched certain industries are in the regional and Russian economy. In agriculture, Ukraine is such a large wheat producer that it is known as the “breadbasket of Europe.” Russia is also a large grain producer.

Russia’s economy is small compared with that of the United States — $1.5 trillion vs. $20.9 trillion — but it’s also too large to ignore. It would be, experts say, like a major corporation pulling out of Texas.

But for economic sanctions to pack the most punch, they say, Russia’s financial isolation must surpass what Western governments can impose and make corporations feel that operations in Russia are risky for both their public image and their balance sheet.

“The financial impact is not going to rock the market or their particular stock price,” said Gary Kalman, U.S. director of the financial-corruption watchdog group Transparency International. “I do think that the reputational threat is larger in terms of people’s perception.”

Some of those corporations are getting called out on social media and by institutional investors. On Twitter, activists have been circulating lists of brands to boycott as they continue to do business in Russia, including McDonald’s, Coca-Cola, PepsiCo, Yum Brands restaurants and Starbucks.

McDonald’s owns the vast majority of its more than 900 locations in Russia and Ukraine, though it sold off 15 percent of them to franchisees after Russia’s 2014 annexation of Crimea.

But other food brands don’t have as much control over their Russian operations. Most Starbucks, Papa John’s, KFC and Pizza Hut locations in Russia are owned by franchisees, limiting the corporations’ abilities to curtail their operations.

Representatives from McDonald’s, Coca-Cola, PepsiCo, Yum Brands and Papa John’s did not respond to requests for comment.

Starbucks chief executive Kevin Johnson wrote in a letter to employees Friday that the company’s 130 Russian stores were “wholly owned and operated by a licensed partner.” Johnson said the company will donate royalties it receives from its Russian business to humanitarian efforts in Ukraine.

Corporations in heavier industries have found it just as difficult to extricate themselves completely from Russian markets. Chicago-based aerospace giant Boeing depends on Russian titanium for things like fasteners and landing gear used in commercial jets. Titanium parts also are widely used in aircraft engines.

On Monday it suspended all purchases of titanium from Russia. It said it has enough stored away to keep producing planes without Russia’s help in the short term.

But Boeing did not comment on the future of its Russian investments, including a titanium production joint venture it started more than a decade ago. It reaffirmed that relationship as recently as November when it signed a memorandum of understanding with Russia’s VSMPO-AVISMA, which describes itself as the world’s largest titanium producer. The company is chaired by Sergey Chemezov, who is often described as a close associate of Russian President Vladimir Putin.

“Our inventory and diversity of titanium sources provide sufficient supply for airplane production, and we will continue to take the right steps to ensure long-term continuity,” Boeing spokesman Paul Lewis said in an emailed statement.

TotalEnergies chief executive Patrick Pouyanné said during a Monday energy industry conference that his company would not renounce its Russian connections because of Europe’s dependence on imported natural gas.

Pouyanné said the company did not face any pressure from authorities in France — which uses far less natural gas than other countries in Western Europe — to cut ties with Russia.

“I had discussions obviously with the highest authority in my country, and there is no push from them for us to exit Russia,” he said, according to Reuters.

At least one major public institutional investor called on corporations doing business in Russia to reevaluate their operations. On Friday, New York State Comptroller Thomas P. DiNapoli wrote to 10 companies with investments held by the state’s pension fund — including McDonald’s, PepsiCo, Mondelez and Kimberly Clark — urging them to reconsider their participation in Russian markets.

Together, New York retired civil servants hold $1.6 billion in the corporations, including a $501 million stake in PepsiCo and $410 million in McDonald’s.

“We believe that companies that continue to operate in Russia and invest in Russian assets face significant and growing legal, compliance, operational, human rights and personnel, and reputational risks. Furthermore, due to the situation’s unpredictability and the likelihood that conditions will deteriorate, companies must ensure that assets will not become stranded or otherwise encumbered by sanctions,” DiNapoli wrote.

Maryland Comptroller Peter Franchot on Monday applauded American companies that halted their operations and partnerships in Russia, and called on U.S. law firms, lobbying groups, developers and accounting firms that work with the Kremlin or Russian organizations to cut off their relationships.

“The most effective way to stop Putin from his unprovoked invasion of Ukraine is to hit him and his oligarch enablers in their wallets,” Franchot said in a statement. “… We’re not going to get involved militarily, so we must be forceful in our efforts to weaken them economically and financially.”

Jeanne Whalen contributed to this report.

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‘Mystery hut’ spotted by China’s Yutu-2 moon rover gets an explanation

The image that caught people’s attention last month.


CNSA/CLEP/Red circle by Amanda Kooser/CNET

The “mystery hut” rock on the moon now has a more fitting name: “jade rabbit.”


CNSA/CLEP/Red circle by Amanda Kooser/CNET

The “mystery hut,” or “house,” spotted by China’s Yutu-2 rover on the far side of the moon turns out to be — drumroll, please — a rock. This isn’t exactly a surprise, but it is an amusing conclusion to the lunar enigma that entranced so many in December.

Once again, Andrew Jones, a journalist who covers the Chinese space program for SpaceNews and Space.com, alerted me to the latest rover team update with a tweet on Friday, describing the conclusion to the saga as “so underwhelming it’s brilliant.”

It turns out the cube-shaped “hut” is a small lumpy rock sitting on a crater rim. It just happened to look much bigger and more mysterious in the rover’s first image. After getting closer and getting some perspective, the rover was able to reveal the object’s true nature.  

“Jade rabbit” looks kind of like a bunny crouching with carrots to the right and pellets to the left.


CNSA/CLEP

But that’s not all. It gets cuter. The rock’s huddled shape has now earned it the nickname “jade rabbit” because it looks a bit like a bunny crouching down with a couple of carrots in front of it. There are some dainty round pieces behind the rock’s “rump” that look like bunny poop, which just adds to the fun.

The Yutu-2 rover’s name translates to Jade Rabbit, so it’s like the rover found its own mascot on the moon.

Yutu-2 is part of the China National Space Administration’s Chang’e-4 mission that landed in 2019 to undertake an ambitious exploration of the moon’s far side (which isn’t always dark). Yutu-2 works on solar power, so it periodically hibernates until the sun comes back out. That’s why it took some time to move closer to the “mystery hut” for a better look.

This is hardly the first time that unusual-looking objects have been discovered in space. The “spoon” and “faces” on Mars have sparked curiosity too.

The ultimate outcome of this adventure may seem like a disappointment, especially if you were hoping for something truly wild, like an alien outpost or an ancient monolith, but I’m actually happy. I got a lot of joy out of the speculation surrounding the original image. I was 99.9% sure it was a boulder and that the only real mystery was its size and shape. That it turned out to resemble a bunny is sweet as can be. 

Not to be lost in all this is the fact that the rover has been having quite a mission. It’s the first to explore the moon’s far side and it’s still rolling along three years after landing. Next up, it will check out the area around the jade rabbit rock and it should be able to get some even better images. We’ll see if it still looks like a bunny on closer scrutiny.  



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China finds explanation for “mystery hut” spotted on the moon

China has discovered the explanation for the mysterious “hut” its Yutu 2 rover spotted on the moon late last year. As the lunar rover made a closer approach, a log of its activities revealed the object was actually just a rock on a crater rim.

The revelation came as the lunar rover drove closer to the formation that was once believed to be as tall as Paris’ Arc de Triomphe, according to a post published Friday on “Our Space,” a Chinese media channel affiliated with the China National Space Administration. Instead, it was much smaller and had a peculiar shape. Upon a closer view, the rock looked like a “jade rabbit” holding carrots, the post said. 

China’s Yutu 2 rover drove to the “mystery hut” and uncovered what it actually is – a rock shaped like a rabbit. 

Our Space


“The Moon’s surface is 38 million square kilometres of rocks, so it would have been astronomically exceptional for it to be anything else,” Space News journalist Andrew Jones wrote on Twitter. “But while small, the jade rabbit/玉兔 rock will also be a monumental disappointment to some.”

According to the Our Space post, the discovery coincides with the rover surpassing more than 1,000 meters of driving, hitting a major milestone before its three-year anniversary on Tuesday of its landing on the far side of the moon in 2019. China landed Yutu 2 as part of its unmanned Chang’e 4 mission

Yutu 2 took a closer look at the “mystery hut” and found that it is a rock shaped like a rabbit. 

Our Space


Yutu 2 first encountered the object while driving across the Von Kármán crater in November during the mission’s 36th lunar day, according to Our Space. The rover, which was 80 meters away (about 262 feet), sent back images of the object on the horizon, sparking theories about what it could be on social media, with some joking it could be an alien base. 

While the results of the rock may have been underwhelming for some, it’s all part of China’s rapidly accelerating space program. In October, China launched a three-person crew for a six-month mission aboard its own space station, aiming to set a new record for the length of time spent in space by Chinese astronauts. Earlier this year, China successfully landed a solar-powered rover in Mars. 



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Remember That Weird ‘Cube’ on The Moon? Yutu-2 Finally Took Closer Pictures

China’s mysterious “Moon cube” is a mystery no longer. The big reveal: It’s a rock that’s not even shaped like a cube.

The nation’s Yutu-2 rover discovered the object – which appeared to be a gray cube looming on the lunar horizon – in early December. The China National Space Administration (CNSA) dubbed it ‘mysterious hut’, playfully speculating that the cube might be an alien house or spacecraft.

 

News reports called it the ‘Moon cube’.

The CNSA estimated the object was about 80 meters (262 feet) away, according to the blog ‘Our Space’, which is affiliated with the agency, and prepared to drive the rover toward it. The blog said it would take two or three months to reach the cube.

After several weeks of preparations and driving, the rover is close enough to see that the ‘mysterious hut’ is just a rock. Its sharp-lined geometric appearance on the horizon was a simple trick of perspective, light, and shadow.

In an updated posted on Friday, Our Space published the rover’s latest photo of its target, below.

Yutu-2 image of the closer rock. (CNSA/CLEP/Our Space)

One of the rover’s ground controllers noted in the blog that the rock is shaped like a rabbit, with smaller rocks in front of it that resemble a carrot. The rover’s name, Yutu, means “Jade Rabbit” – which is now the name of the rock, too.

Yutu-2 reached the Moon in January 2019, when the Chang’e-4 lander touched down on the lunar surface and rolled out a ramp for the rover to descend. It was the first mission to land on the far side of the Moon.

In the three years since, Yutu-2 has driven over 1,000 meters (3,200 feet), used ground-penetrating radar to reveal a surprisingly deep layer of lunar soil, and identified rocks from the lunar mantle, below the crust, which were pushed to the surface when an asteroid crashed into the Moon billions of years ago.

A closer look at the rock. (CNSA/CLEP/Our Space)

The rover has survived long past its initial three-month mission, meaning Yutu-2 had plenty free time for a wild cube chase.

This article was originally published by Business Insider.

More from Business Insider:

 

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‘Mystery hut’ spotted by China’s Yutu-2 moon rover gets an explanation

The image that caught people’s attention last month.


CNSA/CLEP/Red circle by Amanda Kooser/CNET

The “mystery hut” rock on the moon now has a more fitting name: “jade rabbit.”


CNSA/CLEP/Red circle by Amanda Kooser/CNET

The “mystery hut,” or “house,” spotted by China’s Yutu-2 rover on the far side of the moon turns out to be — drumroll, please — a rock. That’s not exactly a surprise, but it is an amusing conclusion to the lunar enigma that entranced so many in December.

Once again, Andrew Jones, a journalist who covers the Chinese space program for SpaceNews and Space.com, alerted me to the latest rover team update with a tweet on Friday, describing the conclusion to the saga as “so underwhelming it’s brilliant.”

It turns out the cube-shaped “hut” is a small lumpy rock sitting on a crater rim. It just happened to look much bigger and more mysterious in the rover’s first image. After getting closer and getting some perspective, the rover was able to reveal the object’s true nature.  

“Jade rabbit” looks kind of like a bunny crouching with carrots to the right and pellets to the left.


CNSA/CLEP

But that’s not all. It gets cuter. The rock’s huddled shape has now earned it the nickname “jade rabbit” because it looks a bit like a bunny crouching down with a couple of carrots in front of it. There are some dainty round pieces behind the rock’s “rump” that look like bunny poop, which just adds to the fun.

The Yutu-2 rover’s name translates to Jade Rabbit, so it’s like the rover found its own mascot on the moon.

Yutu-2 is part of the China National Space Administration’s Chang’e-4 mission that landed in 2019 to undertake an ambitious exploration of the moon’s far side (which isn’t always dark). Yutu-2 works on solar power, so it periodically hibernates until the sun comes back out. That’s why it took some time to move closer to the “mystery hut” for a better look.

This is hardly the first time that unusual-looking objects have been discovered in space. The “spoon” and “faces” on Mars have sparked curiosity too.

The ultimate outcome of this adventure may seem like a disappointment, especially if you were hoping for something truly wild, like an alien outpost or an ancient monolith, but I’m actually happy. I got a lot of joy out of the speculation surrounding the original image. I was 99.9% sure it was a boulder and that the only real mystery was its size and shape. That it turned out to resemble a bunny is sweet as can be. 

Not to be lost in all this is the fact that the rover has been having quite a mission. It’s the first to explore the moon’s far side and it’s still rolling along three years after landing. Next up, it will check out the area around the jade rabbit rock and it should be able to get some even better images. We’ll see if it still looks like a bunny on closer scrutiny.  



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China’s Yutu 2 Finally Uncovers the Reality Behind the ‘Mystery Hut’ on the Moon

Last month, we reported that China’s Yutu 2 rover spotted a mysterious cube-shaped object while traveling across the Von Kármán crater. The internet immediately went wild with theories that the object referred to as a “mystery hut” or “strange cube” may be of alien origin.

The discovery was actually first made in November during the Yutu 2 rover mission’s 36th lunar day. The spotted object was approximately 260 feet (80 meters) away on the northern horizon. The discovery was reported on a Yutu 2 diary entry by Our Space, a Chinese language blog associated with the China National Space Administration (CNSA).

China’s space agency then announced it would travel toward the object at a super-fast lunar speed of 656 feet per hour (200 meters an hour) to get some answers.

Now, we finally have confirmation of what the object is and it’s quite frankly not that exciting. It’s simply a rock.

Paul Byrne, a professor in Earth and Planetary Sciences at Washington University in St. Louis, told Inverse: “It is clearly a large boulder the size of a small boulder. And thus, by definition, it *is* a boulder.”

Byrne further specified:

“There is actually a definition of a boulder, according to something called the Udden–Wentworth scale, which says a boulder is a chunk of rock greater than 256 mm in diameter. So I think our lunar friend counts.”

The Yutu-2 team has now named the rock “Jade Rabbit” due to its resemblance to the animal.

In January of 2020, Yutu-2 released a treasure trove of images from the never-before-seen far side (or “dark” side) of the Moon. The images came from Chang’e-4 lander’s terrain camera and Yutu-2 rover’s panoramic camera.

At the time, an impressive 17,239 data files with a total data volume of 20.9 GB were released.



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Mystery ‘moon hut’ is actually an adorable rabbit-shaped rock

A mysterious “moon hut” spotted by China’s lunar Yutu 2 rover is actually … an adorable rabbit-shaped rock. 

The rock has been nicknamed “jade rabbit” by the Yutu 2 team, which announced its rover’s closer  inspection of the object on Friday (Jan. 7). The nickname is apt, as the rover’s name, Yutu, also translates to “jade rabbit.” 

The object first appeared in the field of view of Yutu 2’s cameras in December, when it looked like a cube-shaped blur on the horizon. The rover is the first to explore the moon‘s far side, which always faces away from Earth and is more rugged and pitted by craters than the moon’s near side. Because the object appeared irregularly symmetrical, with a strange flat top, researchers with the China National Space Administration outreach program Our Space joked that it might be the hut of alien pioneers, Live Science previously reported.

After a month-long traverse of the distance from the original spot where it snapped the “moon hut” image to the site of the object itself, the rover has now sent close-ups back to Earth. It turns out that the rock is much smaller than it appeared to be from afar. It’s also much rounder and cuter. In fact, it looks a lot like a crouched bunny munching on a couple of carrots (which are actually smaller rocks). Some observers, like CNET’s Amanda Kooser, even see bunny poop in a couple of round pebbles near the rock’s other end. 

“The Moon’s surface is 38 million square kilometres of rocks, so it would have been astronomically exceptional for it to be anything else,” space journalist Andrew Jones wrote on Twitter. “But while small, the jade rabbit/玉兔 rock will also be a monumental disappointment to some.”

Because of the lack of perspective in the original image, Jones wrote, many people were hoping for a large structure that looked more like the Arc de Triomphe or Beijing’s towering CCTV headquarters building. 

With the bunny rock cataloged, Yutu 2 will now continue its exploration of the 115-mile-wide (186 kilometers) Von Kármán crater. The rover has been exploring the region since the spacecraft Chang’e 4 delivered it to the lunar surface in the first-ever soft landing on the far side of the moon in January 2019. The rover is the longest-lasting to ever explore the moon’s surface. It has explored the porous soil that makes up at least the top 130 feet (40 m) of the moon’s surface and investigated a strange-colored gel-like substance found in a crater. It turned out to be melted-together rock caused by a long-ago meteorite impact, a 2020 study found.

Originally published on Live Science.



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‘Mystery hut’ on the far side of the moon

The object known as the cube or mystery hut can be seen here on the horizon. What is Yutu 2’s ‘mystery hut’? Image via CNSA/ Space.com.

China’s Yutu 2 rover has been crawling across the lunar surface since landing in Von Kármán crater on the far side of the moon on January 3, 2019. On December 3, 2021, it logged a strange entry in its Yutu No. 2 Driving Diary. It spied a cube-shaped object on the horizon and nicknamed it the ‘mystery hut.’ The Chinese website Our Space publishes the diary and is affiliated with the China National Space Administration (CNSA).

Additionally, the media outlet CNET picked up the story on December 5, with Space.com following on December 6.

The 2022 lunar calendars are here. Order yours before they’re gone!

Yutu 2’s ‘mystery hut’: a cube-shaped oddity

CNSA gave the cube the informal nickname of the ‘mystery hut.’ Don’t take it literally that it’s an actual hut. They estimate the cube at approximately 262 feet (80 m) from the rover’s location on its “36th night” at the end of November 2021. It’s perched just inside the edge of a crater almost due north of that location.

Google-translated screenshot from the Yutu No. 2 Driving Diary, published on Our Space on December 3, 2021. Image via Our Space.
Orbital view from NASA’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) of the Chang’e 4 lander (in square) and the ‘mystery hut’ object (arrow) on the edge of a crater about 260 feet (80 meters) away. Location of the object was possibly verified by space journalist Andrew Jones on Twitter. Image via NASA/ GSFC/ Arizona State University/ LROC.
Zoomed-in orbital view from NASA’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) of what may be the ‘mystery hut’ on the edge of the crater (small bright spot). Image via NASA/ GSFC/ Arizona State University/ LROC.

Notably, it appears to be roughly cube-shaped, although it is difficult to determine the true shape due to the small size of the object in the image. Right now, it is only a few pixels wide. There seems to be a dark spot in the middle of the object, or it may be two smaller objects close together.

Taking a closer look at the mystery hut

The rover team, of course, wants to get a closer look at the object, and Yutu 2 will now start driving toward it. Rovers on the moon and Mars are slow, however, and it will take about 2-3 lunar days (2-3 Earth months) to get there. A lunar day is the period of time for Earth’s moon to complete one rotation on its axis with respect to the sun. That’s about 27 Earth days, 7 hours, 43 minutes and 12 seconds to complete one orbit.

Space journalist Andrew Jones in Finland also tweeted about the discovery:

He also may have verified the specific location to me on Twitter. The object can possibly be seen in orbital images from NASA’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) as a small bright dot on the edge of the crater, almost due north of the rover and about the right distance away. That hasn’t been fully confirmed yet, though.

So, what is it?

At this point, it’s hard to tell for sure, but previous moon exploration would suggest it is most likely a large boulder. Such rocky blocks are common, leftover from crater-producing impacts. The cubic shape might be real, or could be partially an artifact of the relatively low resolution of the image. Ultimately, only closer images will show the true identity of the object.

If it did turn out to be something unnatural, that would, obviously, be a game-changer. Searching for ancient relics of alien civilizations is something scientists are starting to take more seriously. Such artifacts could be on the moon, Mars, or any number of asteroids or other objects in the solar system. The SETA project (Search for Extraterrestrial Artifacts), announced earlier this year, also advocates searching for such evidence.

The Yutu-2 rover as seen from the Chang’e 4 lander, in early January 2019. Image via CNSA/ CLEP/ The Planetary Society.

Yutu 2 and Chang’e 4

The Chang’e 4 spacecraft took the Yutu 2 rover to the lunar surface. It landed in the Von Kármán crater on the far side of the moon on January 3, 2019. It’s the fourth Chinese moon mission to date. Yutu 2 is the second Chinese rover to drive on the moon.

In July 2019, Yutu 2 also discovered a gel-like substance that scientists later identified to most likely be glass from a meteorite impact.

With all this in mind, even if the hut turns out to be ‘just’ a boulder, it will still be of great scientific interest to the scientists involved. Such pieces of lunar real estate can provide valuable clues about the moon and its geological history.

Image from China’s Yutu-2 rover in 2019, showing the bright specks of material resembling impact glass in the center of a small crater. Formerly, Chinese media were reporting this substance as gel-like. This image is the enhanced, high-contrast version, showing the bright specks in some detail. Image via CNSA/ CLEP/ Space.com.

Bottom line: China’s Yutu 2 rover on the far side of the moon has spotted a roughly cube-shaped object on the horizon. What is Yutu 2’s ‘mystery hut’?

Via Yutu No. 2 Driving Diary (translated from Chinese)

Via Space.com



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‘Mystery hut’ on the moon just the latest weird lunar find by China’s Yutu 2 rover

China’s Yutu 2 rover is the first spacecraft to explore the surface of the moon’s far side, and the wheeled robot has made some interesting discoveries during its historic journey. 

Yutu 2 landed in Von Kármán crater atop the Chang’e 4 lander in January 2019 and has been working its way northwest during each 14.5-Earth-day-long lunar day ever since, using its four science payloads to image and analyze its surroundings as it goes.

The solar-powered rover recently spotted a weirdly cube-shaped ‘mystery hut’ on its horizon that has generated quite a bit of media buzz, despite most likely being just a rock. But other findings have also drawn attention over the past couple of years.

Photos: Here’s what China’s Yutu 2 rover found on far side of the moon

A zoomed-in closer look at a cube shape spotted by China’s Yutu 2 rover on the far side of the moon. (Image credit: CNSA/Our Space)

‘Gel-like’ moon discovery and rocks

Yutu 2 discovered an object in the middle of a small crater that was initially described by Our Space — a Chinese-language science outreach channel affiliated with the China National Space Administration — by the term “胶状物” (“jiao zhuang wu”), which can be translated as “gel-like.” There was no accompanying image.

Outside scientists suspected the substance was glassy material created by an impact, and that turned out to be correct. A recent paper in the journal Nature authored by Chinese scientists reported that the material was likely from a meteorite strike on the moon less than one million years ago.

China’s Yutu 2 moon rover captured this image of glassy material from the edge of a small crater. (Image credit: © CNSA/CLEP )

Yutu 2 rover and the ‘milestone’ rock

Another discovery was a number of shards of rock sticking out of the surface, referred to by Our Space as a “milestone.” Once again, a meteor impact is the likely culprit. 

While seemingly mundane, such rocks stand out on a surface that has been pulverized over billions of years by both micrometeorites and harsh solar radiation. When Yutu 2 discovers sizable rocks, they’re generally indicators of impact activity. Such rocks provide clues about the history of the moon and the composition of material excavated or ejected by impactors, as was the case with a set of relatively young rocks discovered in early 2020.

This photo taken by China’s Yutu 2 moon rover shows the elongated “milestone” rock on the lunar surface. (Image credit: CNSA)

Yutu 2 has also been peeking beneath the lunar surface, using its ground-penetrating radar to build an image of layers beneath the rover by collecting reflected electromagnetic waves. Yutu 2 detected three distinct layers in the near subsurface, suggesting that separate, large impact events had delivered ejecta into the region.

The fuzzy image of the “mystery hut” left some people wondering about the quality of Yutu 2’s photographic gear. However, the rover’s pair of panoramic cameras have returned a huge batch of impressive images from the lunar far side.

The lunar far side never faces Earth; it was not seen until the Soviet Union’s Luna 3 spacecraft traveled around the moon in 1959. Chang’e 4 and Yutu 2 therefore cannot beam data directly to Earth and are supported by a relay satellite beyond the moon, which facilitates communications between the spacecraft and its handlers. The relay satellite, known as Queqiao, also collects some data of its own, using a pioneering low-frequency astronomy instrument.

The Yutu 2 rover, as seen shortly after touchdown by the Chang’e 4 lander. (Image credit: CNSA)

So far, Yutu 2 and its Chang’e 4 lander have been active for over 1,000 (Earth) days on the far side of the moon. Yutu 2 has set a new longevity record for a rover working on the lunar surface, surpassing the previous record of 321 days set by the Soviet Union’s robotic Lunokhod 1 rover.

Yutu 2 and Chang’e 4 are currently in their 37th lunar day (each of which is around 29.5 Earth days). The two solar-powered spacecraft hibernate during the two-week-long lunar nights, when the temperature plummets as low as minus 310 degrees Fahrenheit (minus 190 degrees Celsius).

The image of the “mystery hut” was taken during lunar day 36, in November 2021. It’s possible that the China Lunar Exploration Program will release new images in the weeks following the end of lunar day 37, which will come on the evening of Dec. 10. Yutu 2 travels an average of roughly 66 feet to 98 feet (20 to 30 meters) per lunar day, meaning the rover is expected to cover the approximately 260 feet (80 m) to the object by lunar day 38 or 39.

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