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A rocket from the US private rocket company SpaceX, which was sent into space in 2015 to send meteorological satellites, will hit the surface of the moon on March 4.
After the mission was completed, the Falcon Nine rocket did not have enough fuel to return to Earth, which caused it to go into space.
This will be the first time unmanned rockets have hit the moon, astronomer Jonathan McDowell told the BBC.
Jonathan McDowell was part of a team of scientists who accidentally hit something like a rocket on the moon. He thinks the impact of the Falcon Nine colliding with the moon will have little effect.
The rocket is part of Elon Musk's company SpaceX, which is working on a plan to take humans to other planets.
Since 2015, the gravity of the earth, moon and sun has pulled the rocket in many directions, which has improved its orbit.
Astronomer Jonathan McDowell says the rocket is now running on the principle of gravity.
The rocket is part of the air debris that is left in space due to lack of fuel for return after the completion of space missions.
According to Professor Jonathan McDowell, about 50 such large structures have gone out of control in the last 10 years, but this is the first time that it has been formally verified.
The Falcon Nine rocket is expected to hit the moon on March 4 and explode.
According to Professor Jonathan McDowell, it is a four-ton metal tank that will hit a rock at a speed of 5,000 miles per hour, creating a small artificial pit.
Earlier in 2009, astronomers experimented with another rocket-sized object about the moon's surface as an experiment. This means that the collision of the Falcon Nine with the moon will not significantly increase the knowledge of scientists.
Professor Jonathan McDowell says there is no threat from space debris yet, but it could happen in the future.
"In the future, if settlements were to be established on the surface of the moon, we would need information about space debris," he says.
"The amount of garbage in space is not high yet, but we should not wait until it becomes a problem," he said.
The question arises, what will happen from now until March 4? The answer is that the Falcon Nine will continue to move towards the moon according to the principles of gravity and will collide with the moon on March 4.