BEIJING: China's first Mars rover should launch later this month, authorities said Wednesday (Jul 1), as the country races to catch up with the US dominance of space.
The Tianwen-1 Mars rover is scheduled to blast off from Hainan island, off China's south coast, between Jul 20 – 25, according to the Xichang Satellite Launch Centre.
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It will be China's first interplanetary mission, and takes place shortly before the next US Mars rover – timed to launch no earlier than Jul 30.
Named after an ancient Chinese poem, the Tianwen-1 consists of an orbiter, rover and lander, and is expected to collect samples from the planet's surface, the launch centre said.
The system will be carried into space on a Long March 5 rocket and is expected to reach Mars sometime in February 2021.
The dates have been chosen because the Earth and Mars are only aligned at an optimal position for spaceflight for a short period once every 26 months.
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The US delayed the launch window of its own Peseverance probe – its fifth Mars rover mission – three times over the past month due to technical issues.
NASA initially said the launch must take place no later than Aug 15, but more recently suggested the window may be extended.
China has hugely expanded its space programme in recent years to compete with the US and Russia, and has ambitions to put a man on the Moon.
In 2019, it sent the Read More – Source
BEIJING: China's first Mars rover should launch later this month, authorities said Wednesday (Jul 1), as the country races to catch up with the US dominance of space.
The Tianwen-1 Mars rover is scheduled to blast off from Hainan island, off China's south coast, between Jul 20 – 25, according to the Xichang Satellite Launch Centre.
Advertisement
Advertisement
It will be China's first interplanetary mission, and takes place shortly before the next US Mars rover – timed to launch no earlier than Jul 30.
Named after an ancient Chinese poem, the Tianwen-1 consists of an orbiter, rover and lander, and is expected to collect samples from the planet's surface, the launch centre said.
The system will be carried into space on a Long March 5 rocket and is expected to reach Mars sometime in February 2021.
The dates have been chosen because the Earth and Mars are only aligned at an optimal position for spaceflight for a short period once every 26 months.
Advertisement
Advertisement
The US delayed the launch window of its own Peseverance probe – its fifth Mars rover mission – three times over the past month due to technical issues.
NASA initially said the launch must take place no later than Aug 15, but more recently suggested the window may be extended.
China has hugely expanded its space programme in recent years to compete with the US and Russia, and has ambitions to put a man on the Moon.
In 2019, it sent the Read More – Source