The Province

China lands rover on Mars in `milestone' achievemen­t

- — Bloomberg

BEIJING — China successful­ly landed a rover-carrying spacecraft on Mars for the first time on Saturday, marking another major victory for the country's ambitious space program.

China joins the United States as the only other nation to have successful­ly landed and operated rovers on Mars. Chinese President Xi Jinping hailed the feat as a “milestone” achievemen­t.

The Tianwen-1 spacecraft, launched from the Chinese province of Hainan in July, has been orbiting Mars since February while looking for potential landing sites. Early Saturday, it released an entry capsule containing a lander and a rover that began to plummet through the Mars atmosphere, according to Xinhua News Agency.

The entry capsule safely touched down in a flat plane on Mars' surface at 7:18 a.m. Beijing time (4:18 p.m. Friday

PDT), though it took about an hour for ground controller­s to determine that the mission had been a success, state media reported.

During the perilous journey through Mars' atmosphere, the craft had to operate autonomous­ly, and signals could not be transmitte­d back to ground control until the robotic rover had landed and unfolded its solar panels and antenna.

While China has landed craft on the moon before — including the first probe to touch down on the far side of the moon in January 2019 — the Mars mission represents a significan­t leap and showcases Beijing's huge investment­s in its space program.

The U.S. has managed just nine successful Mars landings in the course of more than four decades, and the Soviet Union landed a probe on the planet in 1971 only to immediatel­y lose contact.

China's rover will spend the next three months studying the surface of Mars for signs of water or ice that could point to the planet's ability to sustain life. NASA's Perseveran­ce rover mission, which is also looking for evidence of life on Mars, landed on the Red Planet in February.

“Together with the global science community, I look forward to the important contributi­ons this mission will make to humanity's understand­ing of the Red Planet,” Thomas Zurbuchen, the associate director of NASA's science mission directorat­e, tweeted.

China's aspiration­s for its burgeoning space program include establishi­ng its own space station that will continue to operate after the Internatio­nal Space Station is dismantled, and partnering with Russia to build a lunar base.

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