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  • Japan’s Involvement in Space Exploration and Perspectives for Global Endeavor

    Paper number

    IAC-14,A3,1,5,x26965

    Author

    Ms. Mika Ochiai, United Nations Office for Outer Space Affairs, Austria

    Coauthor

    Mr. KAZUYOSHI KAWASAKI, Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA), Japan

    Year

    2014

    Abstract
    Japan has participated in the International Space Station (ISS) programme since the late 1980s, and through multi-dimensional international cooperation, the nation has accomplished technical and scientific developments such as a space laboratory “Kibo”, advanced cargo transportation HTV, human spaceflight technologies and management methods, as well as various knowledge in space medicine and human/life research. Japan’s space programme has also conducted and envisioned various scientific and engineering missions to the Moon, asteroids and other planets by space proves, and achieved numerous results which have been shared by the global community. Japan launched its lunar probe  (Selene/Kaguya) that gathered a vast amount of lunar data from 15 instruments, making it the largest-scale lunar mission after the Apollo programme. Its successor, Moon orbiter (Selene 2) is planned for this decade. JAXA’s Hayabusa mission explored the near-Earth asteroid Itokawa and returned collected soil to Earth in 2010. A new asteroid sample return missions Hayabusa-2 is planned for 2014, as the precursor of a human asteroid exploration. JAXA has also engaged in the study of future human space exploration as a member of the international space exploration coordination group, ISECG. 
     Today’s world has been facing many issues and dificculties such as economic crisis, environmental problems, and sustainable development. Japan is not an exception. Under such societal climate, there have been many efforts done by JAXA together with the public and private sectors to continue to put efforts for furtherance of space exploration endeavor for the betterment of humanbeings. In addition, active international dialogues have helped to pave the way to promote space exploration. On 9 January 2014, representatives from over 30 countries in Washington D.C. for the International Space Exploration Forum (ISEF), and Japan, as a participating nation in the forum offered to host the next space exploration dialogue as the follow up of the 2014 ISEF.
     This paper will provide the overview of Japan’s latest developments in space exploration programme and discuss a future perspective including the context of global cooperation.
    Abstract document

    IAC-14,A3,1,5,x26965.brief.pdf

    Manuscript document

    (absent)