TOKYO (AP) - A Japanese
spacecraft that landed on an asteroid to collect surface samples and bring them
back to Earth for analysis has developed trouble with its thruster system, the
Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency said Tuesday.
The problem is the latest
facing Japan's attempt to complete the world's first two-way trip to an
asteroid, following earlier problems with the probe's gyroscopes and two
botched practice landings.
The
Hayabusa probe appeared to have touched down Saturday, just long enough to
collect powder from the asteroid's surface and lift off again. But it soon
began shaking due to a gas leak from a thruster, which continued through
Tuesday, Japan's space agency, JAXA, said in a statement on its Web site.
Communication was also briefly lost but restored earlier in the day.
"Judging from the current
circumstances, a certain amount of time will be needed to resume the probe's
operations,'' JAXA said.
The agency is trying to fix
the problem by a December deadline to begin its 290 million kilometers (180
million miles) journey home. Kyodo News agency said failure to remedy the
glitch may make the probe's return impossible.
Hayabusa was launched in
May 2003. On top of recovering samples from the asteroid, named Itokawa, the
probe is also testing a new type of ion engine that uses an electric field to
accelerate positive ions to a high velocity. It also swung by Earth for a
gravity assist that propelled the probe toward Itokawa.
The Hayabusa mission is
part of Japan's efforts to expand its space exploration program. Earlier this
year, JAXA said it would send its first astronauts into space and set up a base
on the moon by 2025.
But the agency has recently
suffered a series of setbacks. A moon probe originally scheduled for launch in
2005 has been delayed, while the agency abandoned a mission to Mars two years
ago after a probe moved off course.
If all goes well with
Hayabusa, it will be the first time a probe returns to Earth with samples from
an asteroid, according to JAXA. A NASA probe collected data for two weeks from
the asteroid Eros in 2001, but did not return with samples.