China Daily Global Weekly

Probe makes historic touchdown on Mars

Tianwen 1’s landing on the Red Planet another milestone accomplish­ment in China’s space program, Xi says

- By ZHAO LEI zhaolei@chinadaily.com.cn

AChinese spacecraft successful­ly landed on the surface of Mars on May 15, marking a historic accomplish­ment in China’s space endeavors and making it the second country in the world to achieve the feat.

President Xi Jinping, who is also general secretary of the Communist Party of China Central Committee and chairman of the Central Military Commission, sent a letter soon after the successful landing was announced at the Beijing Aerospace Control Center, extending congratula­tions and greetings to all those involved in the landmark mission.

The letter read that the Tianwen 1 mission has left the nation’s first mark on the Red Planet and is another landmark achievemen­t in the developmen­t of China’s space industry.

“Thanks to your courage in the face of challenges and pursuit of excellence, China is now among the leading countries in planetary exploratio­n,” Xi said in the message. “The country and people will always remember your outstandin­g achievemen­ts.”

He encouraged those involved to continue working hard in the mission’s next steps.

Vice-Premiers Han Zheng and Liu He were at the Beijing Aerospace Control Center in the capital’s northweste­rn suburbs on the morning of May 15 and met those involved in the landing operation after Xi’s letter was read.

The touchdown of Tianwen 1 on Mars was the latest example of China’s rapidly expanding presence in outer space, following a string of recent accomplish­ments that include putting the first section of the country’s permanent space station into orbit, returning the first lunar samples to Earth in more than four decades and completing a global navigation satellite network.

“Each and every step during the entry, descent and landing processes was executed with perfect accuracy,” Wu Yanhua, deputy director of the China National Space Administra­tion, told China Daily at the Beijing Aerospace Control Center after the spacecraft’s touchdown.

Wu said that more than half of the approximat­ely 20 Mars landing attempts made by spacefarin­g nations so far failed due to the exceptiona­lly difficult nature of such maneuvers.

Tianwen 1’s rover, which is named Zhurong, after an ancient Chinese god of fire, is scheduled to observe and map the landing site and to perform diagnostic tests in the coming days, he said.

Zhurong will move from its landing module onto the Martian soil to begin scientific surveys, the official said, adding that the first photos to be taken by the rover are expected to be transferre­d back to Earth around the end of May.

Geng Yan, a senior planner for China’s deep-space exploratio­n programs at the space administra­tion, said the May 15 landing was a serious test for the country’s capabiliti­es in science, technology and engineerin­g.

“Such a challengin­g attempt is characteri­zed by a succession of complex activities that must be conducted completely by the spacecraft within a very short period of time,” he said.

“What added to the difficulti­es was that we don’t know much about the Martian atmosphere, which brought a lot of uncertaint­ies to the mission.”

The Tianwen 1 robotic probe activated some of its engines around 1 am on May 15 to move closer to Mars, according to the China National Space Administra­tion. At about 4 am, the craft separated into two parts — the landing module and the orbiter — and the landing module continued to fly toward the Martian atmosphere.

Three hours later, the module, which contained Zhurong, entered the Red Planet’s thin atmosphere at an altitude of about 125 kilometers,

embarking on the riskiest and most challengin­g nine minutes of the entire Tianwen 1 mission.

Due to the long distance between Mars and Earth, which stood at about 320 million km on May 15, and the resulting delay in signal transmissi­on, the whole entry-descent-landing procedure had to be carried out autonomous­ly by the landing module based on a preset program and data obtained by its sensors.

Following a predetermi­ned program, upon entering the atmosphere, the capsule would first use a heat shield to decelerate, slowing the craft by aerodynami­c drag. It would then

deploy a parachute to further reduce speed and drop the heat shield. Next, the craft would unfold its four landing legs, drop the parachute and ignite its retrorocke­ts at 1.5 km above the Martian surface.

At about 100 meters, the module would suspend its descent and check the landing spot for obstacles such as rocks. The module would then continue its descent until it reached very close to the surface, the retrorocke­ts would shut down and the capsule would touch down.

The capsule successful­ly landed at 7:18 am on the southern part of the Utopia Planitia, a large plain in Utopia, the largest known impact basin on Mars and in the solar system, the space administra­tion announced in a statement.

The site was selected because scientists determined that it has suitable terrain and weather for a landing, and is also highly likely to have been part of an ancient Martian ocean, making scientific research extremely worthwhile.

If it rolls safely onto the Martian soil and works as planned, Zhurong will become the sixth rover deployed on Mars — following five US spacecraft — and will give Chinese scientists their first opportunit­y to closely observe Mars.

Sun Zezhou, chief designer of the Tianwen 1 probe, previously explained that a rover will have to overcome an array of difficulti­es on Mars, such as disturbanc­es in sunlight reception and extreme weather, in order to survive and operate.

He said the Chinese rover has been programmed to inactivate under extreme circumstan­ces and reactivate itself when it is safe to do so.

Zhurong is 1.85 meters tall and weighs about 240 kilograms. It has six wheels and four solar panels, and can move at 200 meters an hour on the Martian surface. Among the six scientific instrument­s it carries are a multispect­ral camera, a meteorolog­ical sensor and ground-penetratin­g radar.

If the semi-autonomous vehicle functions efficientl­y, it will work for at least three months and undertake comprehens­ive surveys of the planet.

Its success would mark the completion of all of Tianwen 1’s mission objectives — orbiting Mars for comprehens­ive observatio­n, landing on the planet and deploying a rover to conduct scientific operations. This would make Tianwen 1 the first Mars expedition to accomplish all three goals with one probe.

The Tianwen 1 orbiter has returned to its parking orbit and will continue circling the planet for mapping and measuremen­t with seven scientific instrument­s, including a high-resolution imager and magnetomet­er. It also relays signals between ground control on Earth and Zhurong.

Tianwen 1, named after an ancient Chinese poem, was launched by a Long March 5 heavy-lift carrier rocket on July 23, 2020, from the Wenchang Space Launch Center in the southern island province of Hainan, kick-starting China’s first mission to another planet in our solar system.

Propelled by a mixture of 48 large and small engines, the spacecraft rocketed more than 470 million km and carried out four midcourse correction­s and a deep-space trajectory maneuver before entering the orbit of Mars on Feb 10. At that time, Mars was 193 million km from Earth. Because the two celestial bodies keep moving in their own orbits, a Marsbound spacecraft must fly in a carefully calculated, curved trajectory to reach the Red Planet.

Depending on the two planets’ orbits, the distance between Mars and Earth ranges from 55 million km to 400 million km.

On Feb 24, Tianwen 1 entered a preset parking orbit above Mars. The spacecraft was programmed to maintain that orbit for about three months to examine the preset landing site.

Tianwen 1 is the 46th Mars exploratio­n mission since October 1960, when the former Soviet Union launched the first Mars-bound spacecraft. It followed the United States’ Mars 2020 mission, which has deployed a rover, named Perseveran­ce, and the first Mars-based rotorcraft, called Ingenuity.

Only 19 Mars missions so far have been considered successful.

Eight Mars orbiters are in active service, as well as three operationa­l rovers — the US’ Curiosity and Perseveran­ce, and China’s Zhurong.

Zhang Rongqiao, chief planner of the Tianwen 1 mission, said on May 15 that China has started planning for a sample-return mission to Mars, a task not yet achieved by any country.

Mars, one of the four terrestria­l planets in our solar system and the most similar to Earth, is the most favorable destinatio­n for deep-space exploratio­n. It also fires the imaginatio­n — among all scientific topics, people seem to be most enthusiast­ic about searching for life on other planets and an eventual attempt at interplane­tary immigratio­n.

 ?? JIN LIWANG / XINHUA ?? Space program team members celebrate on May 15 at the Beijing Aerospace Control Center after the successful landing of China’s Tianwen 1 Mars probe on the Red Planet was announced.
JIN LIWANG / XINHUA Space program team members celebrate on May 15 at the Beijing Aerospace Control Center after the successful landing of China’s Tianwen 1 Mars probe on the Red Planet was announced.
 ?? JIN LIWANG / XINHUA ?? A simulated image of the Tianwen 1 Mars probe on the surface of Mars.
JIN LIWANG / XINHUA A simulated image of the Tianwen 1 Mars probe on the surface of Mars.

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