Las Vegas Review-Journal

China’s mission to Mars launches

Flight to red planet is the second this week

- By Samuel Mcneil and Aniruddha Ghosal The Associated Press

BEIJING — China launched its most ambitious Mars mission yet on Thursday in an attempt to join the United States in successful­ly landing a spacecraft on the red planet.

A Long March-5 rocket took off under clear skies from Hainan Island, south of China’s mainland, as space enthusiast­s gathered on a beach across the bay from the launch site.

“This is a kind of hope, a kind of strength,” said Li Dapeng, co-founder of the China branch of the Mars Society, an advocacy group. He watched with his wife, 11-year-old son and 2,000 others on the beach.

Launch commander Zhang Xueyu announced to cheers in the control room that the rocket was flying normally about 45 minutes later. “The Mars rover has accurately entered the scheduled orbit,” he said in remarks shown live on state broadcaste­r CCTV.

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

Liu Tongjie, spokesman for the mission, said in a news briefing that the launch was a “key step of China marching towards farther deep space.” He said that China’s aim wasn’t to compete with other countries but to peacefully explore the universe.

It marked the second flight to

Mars this week, after a United Arab Emirates orbiter blasted off Monday on a rocket from Japan. And the U.S. is aiming to launch Perseveran­ce, its most sophistica­ted Mars rover ever, from Cape Canaveral, Florida, next week.

“It’s amazing that another nation has launched the case for Mars,” said Katarina Miljkovic, a planetary scientist at Curtin University in Australia. “It’s more like this marathon of space that we all want to be running.”

China’s tandem spacecraft — with both an orbiter and a rover — will take seven months to reach Mars. If all goes well, Tianwen-1, or “quest for heavenly truth,” will look for undergroun­d water and evidence of possible ancient life.

It isn’t China’s first attempt at Mars. In 2011, a Chinese orbiter accompanyi­ng a Russian mission was lost when the spacecraft failed to get out of Earth’s orbit after launching from Kazakhstan.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? A rocket carrying the Tianwen-1 Mars probe lifts off Thursday from the Wenchang Space Launch Center in China’s Hainan province. The probe is to look for undergroun­d water.
The Associated Press A rocket carrying the Tianwen-1 Mars probe lifts off Thursday from the Wenchang Space Launch Center in China’s Hainan province. The probe is to look for undergroun­d water.

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