[Photo/Xinhua]

Chinese researchers have conducted preliminary topographical analysis of the landing site of the country's Chang'e 4 lunar probe, the China National Space Administration said on Friday.

By Friday morning, Chang'e 4 – consisting of a lander and a rover – and the Queqiao relay satellite had been in stable condition, the administration said in a statement.

[Photo provided by China National Space Administration]

Cameras mounted on the lander took panoramic images of the landing site and transmitted those images to the ground control via Queqiao, enabling researchers to do a topographical analysis, it noted, adding that the rover, named Yutu 2, or Jade Rabbit 2, was activated on Thursday after a short standby mode.

Chang'e 4 was lifted atop a Long March 3B rocket in early December at the Xichang Satellite Launch Center in southwestern China's Sichuan province to make the country's fourth lunar expedition and mankind's first surface observations of the moon's far side that never faces the Earth

[Photo provided by China National Space Administration]

The robotic probe made a soft landing on the far side on Jan 3 and then released a lunar rover, the seventh rover on the moon and also the first to get to the far side, to roam and survey the landing site in the South Pole–Aitken basin, the largest and deepest known basin in the solar system.