Tianwen-1, China's mission to Mars, has entered orbit
(CNN)After traveling through space for seven months, China's Tianwen-1 probe has reached Mars and successfully entered the planet's orbit on Wednesday -- bringing it one step closer to landing on the surface.
Tianwen-1,
whose name means "quest for heavenly truth," is made up of an orbiter,
lander and a six-wheeled rover carrying scientific instruments,
according to the China National Space Administration (CNSA.)
The
CNSA said it will gather important information about Mars' geological
structure, atmosphere, environment and soil, and search for any signs of
water. The spacecraft is expected to land on the planet's surface in
May or June.
The Tianwen-1 makes China the sixth country in history to reach Mars.
Tianwen-1
was launched last July, along with two other international Mars
missions: NASA's Perseverance rover and the United Arab Emirates' Hope
Probe.
All
three missions launched around the same time due to an alignment
between Mars and the Earth on the same side of the sun, making for a
more efficient journey to the red planet.
NASA's Perseverance rover is expected to land on Mars on February 18.
So far, the United States and the former Soviet Union are the only two countries to land a spacecraft on
the surface of Mars. But the European Space Agency and India have
previously sent spacecraft to enter the planet's orbit -- and on
Tuesday, the UAE joined their ranks, with its Hope Probe successfully entering orbit.
With
Tianwen-1, China is the first nation to attempt sending both an orbiter
and a rover on its first homegrown Mars mission. According to the
scientific team behind the mission, the probe will "orbit, land and
release a rover all on the very first try, and coordinate observations
with an orbiter."
By
contrast, NASA sent multiple orbiters to Mars before ever attempting a
landing, since pulling off the landing is a far more difficult task.
The Chinese rover is expected to stay for three months, with the hope that it can gather important information about the planet.
China's space ambitions
Wednesday's
news marks the latest success for China's ambitious space sector, which
has transformed rapidly in the past few decades.
Though Chinese authorities and state media have hailed Tianwen-1 as the country's first mission to Mars, that isn't quite true.
China's first attempt to reach Mars was actually in 2011 with the Yinghuo-1 probe,
which was supposed to orbit the red planet and study its environmental
structure. It launched from Kazakhstan in tandem with the Russian
Phobos-Grunt mission in November that year.
But
the mission failed, with a malfunction that stranded the probe in Earth
orbit's shortly after launch. In 2012, the spacecraft re-entered the
Earth's atmosphere and fell back to Earth, landing in the Pacific Ocean.
It
was a disappointing blow to the country's young space program, which
has historically lagged behind other countries. Beijing only launched
its first crewed space flight in 2003, more than 40 years after NASA's
achievement.
But all that has changed in recent years.
Under
President Xi Jinping, who took office in 2013, China has invested
billions of dollars into its space program, fired space labs and
satellites into orbit and landed three unmanned spacecraft on the moon.
The
government has singled out space as a national research priority,
especially deep space explorations and in-orbit space craft.
Increasingly, private Chinese companies are also investing in space
research and technology.
As
well as the Tianwen-1 Mars mission, Beijing is also planning to launch a
permanent space station by 2022, and is looking at sending astronauts
to the Moon -- possibly in the 2030s.
No comments