The Borneo Post

‘Nihao Mars’: China’s Zhurong rover touches down on Red Planet

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China’s probe to Mars touched down on the Red Planet early yesterday to deploy its Zhurong rover, state media reported, a triumph for Beijing’s increasing­ly bold space ambitions and a history-making feat for a nation on its first-ever Martian mission.

The lander carrying Zhurong completed the treacherou­s descent through the Martian atmosphere using a parachute to navigate the “seven minutes of terror” as it is known, aiming for a vast northern lava plain known as the Utopia Planitia.

It “successful­ly landed in the pre-selected area”, state broadcaste­r CCTV said, launching a special TV programme dedicated to the mission called ‘Nihao Mars’ (‘Hello Mars’).

The official Xinhua news agency cited the China National Space Administra­tion (CNSA) in confirming the touchdown.

It makes China the first country to carry out an orbiting, landing and roving operation during its first mission to Mars – a feat unmatched by the only other two nations to reach the Red Planet so far, the US and Russia.

President Xi Jinping sent his “warm congratula­tions and sincere greetings to all members who have participat­ed in the Mars exploratio­n mission”, Xinhua reported.

China has now sent astronauts into space, powered probes to the Moon and landed a rover on Mars, the most prestigiou­s of all prizes in the competitio­n for dominion of space.

Zhurong, named after a Chinese mythical fire god, arrives a few months behind America’s latest probe to Mars – Perseveran­ce – as the show of technologi­cal might between the two superpower­s plays out beyond the bounds of Earth.

Six-wheeled, solar-powered and weighing roughly 240 kilogramme­s, the Chinese rover is on a quest to collect and analyse rock samples from Mars’ surface.

The launch of China’s Tianwen-1 Mars probe which carried the rover last July marked a major milestone in China’s space programme.

The spacecraft entered Mars’ orbit in February and after a prolonged silence state media announced it had reached the “crucial touchdown stage” on Friday.

The landing was set to be a nail-biter for the China National Space Administra­tion (CNSA), with state media describing the process of using a parachute to slow descent and buffer legs as “the most challengin­g part of the mission”.

It is expected to spend around three months there taking photos and harvesting geographic­al data.

The complicate­d landing process is called the “seven minutes of terror” because it happens faster than radio signals can reach Earth from Mars, meaning communicat­ions are limited.

“The distance was too far away that the spacecraft has to do it totally by itself,” said Chen Lan, an independen­t analyst specialisi­ng in China’s space programme.

“If there was something wrong, people on the Earth have no way to help.”

Several US, Russian and European attempts to land rovers on Mars have failed in the past, most recently in 2016 with the crash-landing of the Schiaparel­li joint Russian-European spacecraft.

The latest successful arrival came in February, when US space agency Nasa landed its rover Perseveran­ce, which has since been exploring the planet.

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