Several months after departing from the Moon, a Chinese spacecraft has arrived at a new destination about 1.5 million kilometers from Earth, according to news reports in China.

The Changโ€™e 2 Moon probe arrived at Lagrange Point 2 (L2) โ€” a place where the gravity of Earth and the sun roughly balance out โ€” Aug. 25, the Xinhua news service reported Aug. 30. Changโ€™e 2 had left lunar orbit in early June to head for deeper space.

China is now the worldโ€™s third entity to put a probe in L2, one of five spots in near-Earth space that serve as a sort of parking lot for spacecraft to hover without being pulled toward any planetary body. NASA and the European Space Agency also have accomplished the feat.

Officials from Chinaโ€™s State Administration of Science, Technology and Industry for National Defense (SASTIND) said that Changโ€™e 2 will carry out exploration activities around L2 over the coming year, Xinhua reported. SASTIND also plans to launch two โ€œmeasure and control stationsโ€ into outer space by the end of 2012, and Changโ€™e 2 will be used to test the stationsโ€™ functionality at that time.

Changโ€™e 2 launched Oct. 1, 2010, and arrived in lunar orbit five days later. The probe is the second step in Chinaโ€™s three-phase Moon exploration program, which includes a series of unmanned missions to explore the lunar surface.

During its time orbiting the Moon, Changโ€™e 2 took a lot of high-resolution photos to help plan out future missions, which will drop hardware onto Earthโ€™s nearest neighbor. China is aiming to launch a Moon rover around 2012, and another rover will land on the Moon and return to Earth with lunar samples around 2017, according to Xinhua.

Changโ€™e 2 finished up its duties around the Moon in April but had enough fuel left over that officials decided to send the probe off into deeper space.

The spacecraftโ€™s predecessor, Changโ€™e 1, launched in October 2007 and conducted a 16-month Moon observation mission, after which it crash-landed on the lunar surface by design in March 2009. The Changโ€™e probes are named after the nationโ€™s mythical Moon goddess.