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China to carry out its first mission to Mars this summer
by Staff Writers
Beijing (Sputnik) Jun 03, 2020

Artwork depiciting China's Mars lander mission that is expected to launch during the July/August period this year.

China has set a goal to become a major space power as a means of catching up with Russia and the United States, pursuing ambitions to launch missions to the red planet and the Moon.

China will launch its first mission to Mars in July or August, according to the director of China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation (CASC), Bao Weimin. Earlier, the name of the mission was revealed as 'Tianwen', translated as 'Questions to Heaven'. The Tianwen-1 spacecraft is planned to be carried by a Long March-5 rocket this summer and is intended to reach Mars in February 2021.

"Between July and August this year, we will use the Long March-5 carrier rocket to launch [the spacecraft]", Bao stated in an interview with CCTV on Monday.

Bao elaborated that the mission is tasked with putting a probe into orbit around Mars, and subsequently to land a robotic rover on the surface of the fourth planet from the sun, which is expected to operate on the surface for a period of some 90 Martian days, around three Earth months.

"The first key point of the mission will be ensuring that the orbiter gets captured by the gravity field of Mars. And the next one will be that the landing takes seven to eight minutes", Bao told CCTV.

In November 2019, China successfully landed a rover in an earthbound test experiment, simulating the robot contacting the red planet's surface, hovering and avoiding obstacles. In January 2019, China became the first nation to land a rover on the far side of the lunar surface.

Source: RIA Novosti


Related Links
China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation
Mars News and Information at MarsDaily.com
Lunar Dreams and more


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MARSDAILY
Martian moon orbit hints at ancient ring
Mountain View CA (SPX) Jun 03, 2020
Scientists from the SETI Institute and Purdue University have found that the only way to produce Deimos's unusually tilted orbit is for Mars to have had a ring billions of years ago. While some of the more massive planets in our solar system have giant rings and numerous big moons, Mars only has two small, misshapen moons, Phobos and Deimos. Although these moons are small, their peculiar orbits hide important secrets about their past. For a long time, scientists believed that Mars's two moons, dis ... read more

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