The Chinese have quite a way to go to reach NASA's standard for releasing data to the press, but it's starting to dribble out.
http://www.spaceflightnow.com/china/change3/131216photos/I hadn't seen the picture of the lander as seen from the rover. Note the following:
1. Absolutely black sky; no stars
2. Lander covered with cheap-looking gold-painted "tin foil"
3. Shadow side of lander is brightly lit
4. No sign of blast crater under lander
5. No piles of lunar dirt on top of landing pads
Let's see just how many more we can find. Anybody see a "C" on any of those rocks? :-)
</sarcasm mode>
Can anybody orient this picture for me? Glancing at the moon tonight I noticed that it's approximately full, meaning that the lunar longitude of the sun is roughly zero. The landing site is roughly 44N 20 W, so the sun should be in the south-southeast. The shadow of the rover is to the left as seen by the lander, which means the lander is looking approximately east -- is that right?
That dish on the lander is probably designed to communicate with earth, but if I'm right about the orientation it doesn't seem to be pointed that way at the moment. I don't know the communication system; can the rover communicate only with earth or can it also relay through the lander?