Kim Kardashian is studying to become a lawyer in 2022
Kim Kardashian West is the cover star of Vogue's May 2019 issue. In her interview, she announced that she is studying to become a lawyer. Kim is not studying at a university but will complete a four-year apprenticeship at a law firm in San Francisco.
So far, only three countries have made a soft landing on the moon - Russia, the USA and China. If all goes according to plan, Israel will secure a place in the space history books today, April 11, becoming the fourth nation to successfully land on the moon. The Beresheet probe will also be the first privately funded spacecraft to be sent on a mission to the moon.
The spacecraft weighs 585 kilograms and is about the size of a washing machine. The name is Beresheetis derived from Hebrewand means “emergence” or “beginning”. The Beresheet spacecraft left Earth aboard the SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket in February and reached the Moon's orbit on April 4.
Beresheet was built by SpaceIL, a non-profit Israeli space company, in partnership with the state-owned Israeli Aerospace Industry (IAI). The project was an entry to Google's lunar competition, Lunar-X-Prize, which took place in 2007 and 2008. The competition ended last year without a winner. Although SpaceIL did not win the $20 million prize, the company continued to develop its lunar mission. The entire mission cost $100 million.
The next step of the mission is for Beresheet to attempt to land on the lunar surface. The landing is planned for this evening, probably at 10 p.m. German time, and will be broadcast live.
The Beresheet probe landing site, Mare Serenitatis, is located in the northern hemisphere of the Moon, near the landing sites of Apollo 15 and 17 and Lunar 2 and 21. The chosen landing sitehas few craters, which means the landing should go smoothly.
Beresheet has cameras to take photos and a magnetic measuring instrument to measure the magnetic field on the lunar surface at that location. How long the four-legged space probe will remain functional remains unclear. She has two or three days before the sun overheats her. Your goal is to examine the moon's iron core.