China launches ambitious attempt to land on Mars


BEIJING – China launched its most ambitious mission on Mars on Thursday in a bold attempt to join the United States to successfully land a spacecraft on the red planet.

With the engines running orange, a March 5 carrier rocket took off under a clear sky around 12:40 p.m. from Hainan Island, southern mainland China. Hundreds of space enthusiasts shouted enthusiastically on a beach across the bay from the launch site.

“This is a type of hope, a type of strength,” said Li Dapeng, co-founder of the Chinese branch of the Mars Society, an international enthusiastic group. He was wearing a Mars Society t-shirt, and was there with his wife, their 11-year-old son, and another 2,000 on the beach to see the launch.

A security guard is cropped near a screen displaying rovers on Mars during an exhibition in Beijing on July 23, 2020. Ng Han Guan / AP

Launch commander Zhang Xueyu announced in the control room that the rocket was flying normally about 45 minutes later. “The Mars rover has entered precisely programmed orbit,” he said in brief comments shown live on the state television network CCTV.

China’s space agency said the rocket carried the probe for 36 minutes before successfully placing it on the looped path that will take it beyond Earth’s orbit and eventually into Mars’ most distant orbit around the sun. .

Liu Tongjie, a spokesman for the mission, said at a press conference that the launch was a “key step in China’s march into deeper space.” He said that China’s goal was not to compete with other countries, but to peacefully explore the universe.

It marked the second flight to Mars this week, after an UAE orbiter took off on a rocket from Japan on Monday. And the United States is aiming to launch Perseverance, its most sophisticated Mars rover, from Cape Canaveral, Florida, next week.

“It is surprising that another nation has launched the Mars case,” said Dr. Katarina Miljkovic, a planetary scientist at Curtin University in Australia, adding that the world was no longer in a space race. “It’s more like this space marathon that we all want to run.”

China’s tandem spacecraft, with an orbiter and rover, will take seven months to reach Mars, like the others. If all goes well, Tianwen-1, or “Search for Heavenly Truth,” will search for groundwater, if present, as well as evidence of possible ancient life.

This is not China’s first attempt at Mars. In 2011, a Chinese orbiter accompanying a Russian mission was lost when the spacecraft was unable to leave Earth’s orbit after it was launched from Kazakhstan, and eventually burned up in the atmosphere.

This time, China is doing it alone. It is also fast, launching an orbiter and a rover on the same mission instead of chaining them.

China’s secret space program has developed rapidly in recent decades. Yang Liwei became the first Chinese astronaut in 2003, and last year Chang’e-4 became the first spacecraft in any country to land on the other side of the moon.

Conquering Mars would put China in an elite club.

“There is a lot of prestige in this,” said Dean Cheng, an expert on Chinese aerospace programs at the Heritage Foundation in Washington.

The launch was “brave,” said Dr. Jonathan McDowell, an astronomer at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics. The next challenge is for the probe to “continue to operate when it reaches Mars and survives the entrance and landing.”

Landing on Mars is notoriously difficult. Only the US has successfully landed a spacecraft on Martian soil, doing so eight times since 1976. NASA’s InSight and Curiosity rovers are still operating today. Six other spacecraft are exploring Mars from orbit: three Americans, two Europeans, and one from India.

Unlike the other two Mars missions to be launched this month, China has strictly controlled information about the program, even withholding any names for its rover. National security concerns prompted the United States to curb cooperation between NASA and China’s space program.

In an article published earlier this month in Nature Astronomy, mission chief engineer Wan Weixing said that Tianwen-1 would orbit around Mars in February and search for a landing site on Utopia Planitia, a plain where NASA has Detected possible evidence of underground ice. Wan died in May of cancer.

Landing would be attempted in April or May, according to the article. If all goes well, the 240 kilogram (530 pound) rover the size of a solar powered golf cart is expected to run for about three months, and the orbiter for two years.

There is uncertainty even after the rover lands on Mars, Liu Tongjie said. “For example, if there is a sandstorm, you must modify your way of working to prevent the sands from falling onto the solar panel, which will affect your ability to obtain energy,” he said.

Although it’s small compared to the perseverance of 1,025 kilograms (2,260 pounds) the size of a United States car, it is almost twice as big as the two rovers that China sent to the moon in 2013 and 2019. Perseverance is expected operate for at least two years.

This Mars launch season, which occurs every 26 months when Earth and Mars are closest, is especially busy.

The UAE spacecraft, Amal, or Hope, which will orbit Mars but not land, is the first interplanetary mission in the Arab world. NASA’s Perseverance rover is as follows.

“At no other time in our history have we seen anything like what is unfolding with these three unique missions to Mars. Each of them is a marvel of science and engineering, ”said Thomas Zelibor Space Foundation Executive Director in an online panel discussion earlier this week.

The road from China to Mars hit a few bumps: a March 5 long rocket, nicknamed “Fat 5” due to its bulky shape, failed to launch earlier this year. The coronavirus pandemic forced scientists to work from home. In March, when the instruments needed to be transported from Beijing to Shanghai, three team members drove 12 hours to deliver them.

As China joins the US, Russia, and Europe in creating a global satellite-based navigation system, experts say it is not trying to overcome the US leadership in space exploration.

Instead, the Heritage Foundation’s Cheng said China is in a “slow race” with Japan and India to establish themselves as Asia’s space power.