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China's First Mars Rover Launch Could Make History

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China's First Mars Rover Launch Could Make History
If the nation's mission is successful, it will become only the second country to ever deploy a rover on the surface of the Red Planet.
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FOR THE LAST 20 years, the only sign of activity on Mars was a succession of NASA-built rovers slowly rolling across the barren desert landscape. Today, only one of these rovers—Curiosity—is still operational. But in just a few months it will have some new wheeled visitors. One of them is Curiosity’s descendant. It’s called Perseverance, and NASA is sending it on a mission to collect samples of Martian dirt that might have signs of life. It will be the largest and most autonomous robot that has ever landed on the surface of another planet.

The other newcomer will be Tianwen-1, an orbiter-lander-rover combo built by China. The rover is dwarfed by Perseverance, but it still qualifies as one of the most complex machines ever built. If China successfully deploys a rover on Mars, it will become only the second country in history to pull this off. Other than the US, the only nation to even try it was the Soviet Union, and it failed—twice. Mars is an incredibly challenging target and for China, Tianwen-1 is a message to the rest of the world that it’s no longer merely a participant in space exploration; now it’s a leader.

“China is going to demonstrate that it has a world class science and technology capability,” says Dean Cheng, a Heritage Foundation expert on China’s space program. But it’s not just about projecting power to the world, he says: It’s also a major point of national pride and a triumph of political will. “It is something that will demonstrate to the Chinese people that the Chinese Communist Party is powerful and able to guide the nation,” Cheng says.


On Thursday, a Chinese Long March 5 rocket is expected to boost Tianwen-1 on a six-month mission to the Red Planet. (The Chinese government has been tight lipped about exactly when the mission will depart, but the launch window extends until mid-August.) The Tianwen probe is actually three spacecraft rolled up into one: It consists of a rover, a lander, and an orbiter. The rover is stored in the belly of the lander, and about two months after the probe arrives in Mars orbit, the lander will separate from the orbiter and make its way to the surface. The orbiter will spend at least a year keeping tabs on the lander from above and relaying the data it collects back to Earth, while also doing some science of its own.


Chinese scientists haven’t announced the rover’s landing site yet, but a leading candidate is Utopia Planitia, a plain located in the largest impact crater on the planet. (This was also the destination of NASA’s second Mars lander, Viking 2.) Once the rover is deployed, it will spend at least three months studying the Martian environment. The China National Space Administration has released few specifics about the rover or the types of experiments it will be doing, but a paper published in Nature Astronomy this month by researchers from the Chinese Academy of Sciences says the goal of the mission is to “perform a global and extensive survey of the entire planet.”


The rover has an array of solar panels fanning out from its circular body that will be used to power its communication systems and six onboard instruments. In addition to two cameras, the rover will carry a radar for exploring beneath the surface, an instrument for detecting Mars’ weak magnetic field, an instrument to measure the chemistry of Martian soil, and another instrument to monitor Mars’ weather. Although the rover will be limited to a few hundred meters around its landing site, the orbiter will be able to collect more comprehensive data about the planet.


Tianwen-1 is China’s first dedicated mission beyond the moon. (A few years ago, Chinese scientists piggybacked a Mars orbiter on a Russian mission, but the mission failed shortly after launch.) Although it’s mostly matching feats that US spacecraft accomplished decades ago, Tianwen-1 is notable for doing them all at once. US scientists put the first orbiter around Mars in 1971 and the first lander on its surface just five years later. But it took NASA another 20 years to deploy its first Mars rover—and it was a lot smaller than China’s. “If successful, [Tianwen-1] would signify a major technical breakthrough,” the Chinese mission scientists wrote in Nature Astronomy. “No planetary missions have ever been implemented in this way.”

It’s a risky move, but it’s in keeping with China’s broader “go big or go home” approach to space exploration. Last year, China’s Chang’e 4 mission became the first to put a lander on the far side of the moon, and the rover it deployed is still roaming the surface more than a year later. Last month, the China National Space Administration completed the BeiDou navigation system, a national version of the US-controlled GPS network. China’s military built and tested a robotic space plane similar to the US Air Force’s mysterious X-37B space plane, and the Chinese Academy of Sciences operates the world’s largest radio telescope. China’s space agency pioneered quantum satellite communications, it’s building its own space station—something the US couldn’t muster the political support to do on its own—and, yes, it even has plans for a moonbase. There are still the occasional missteps that would be expected of a maturing space program, like the chaotic reentry of the Tiangong-1 space station a few years ago, but whom amongst us hasn’t lost control of a space station at some point?

China’s spacefaring ambitions have a lot in common with NASA’s own plans for the future. But it’s complicated by the fact there isn’t really a distinction between China’s civilian and military space programs. The China National Space Administration is the equivalent of NASA and employs the scientists that develop the instruments and study the data on missions like Tianwen-1, but it is managed by China’s People’s Liberation Army. “China’s space program is dominated by the military,” says Cheng. “The guys who understand the science are civilians, but they report to military officers.” This also means that all space technologies are considered “dual use.” The same assembly line that made the rocket to send Tianwen-1 to Mars is also cranking out boosters made for war.

But that doesn’t mean the Tianmen-1 mission is solely—or even mostly—a military flex. Cheng says it's first and foremost about science, even if the lessons learned during the mission end up benefiting the military, too. He says that the Mars shot will give the Chinese military a “thorough workout” on several processes relevant to national security, like using its deep space communications network and demonstrating its capacity to precisely track small objects in the vast, empty expanse of deep space.

“It's not like China is going to land missiles on Mars,” Cheng says. “But it is the kind of thing that is going to benefit their military industrial complex.”

But that’s the way it’s always been in China. In the 1950s, Chairman Mao Zedong launched the country’s “two bombs, one satellite” program with the explicit aim of developing missiles that could deliver nuclear warheads and loft satellites into orbit. But now that China is catching up to the US in the final frontier, the dual nature of these technologies has raised fears among US policymakers and military officials that the world may be on the brink of a new “space race.


“Space is the new high ground in great power competition, and the U.S. must secure and maintain its superiority there,” US Major Liane Zivitski, a US Air Force intelligence officer, wrote in an op-ed for DefenseNews last month, citing the Tianwen-1 mission as evidence of the country’s increasing launch capabilities. “Beijing’s track record of deviation from international norms leaves the U.S. no choice but to prepare to defend itself.”


Concerns about a militarized space race aren’t new, but it’s not like extraterrestrial diplomacy is on the table. NASA and American space companies were effectively banned from working with China in the mid-1990s after a Congressional investigation accused China of stealing hardware from an American telecommunications satellite, which may have improved China’s missile capabilities. (At that point, satellites containing American parts could still catch a ride on Chinese rockets.) In 2011, this ban became law when former US Representative Frank Wolf—who had previously called China an “evil empire” comparable to Nazi Germany—added an amendment to a NASA appropriations bill that prohibited the agency’s scientists from collaborating with any Chinese nationals affiliated with the Chinese government. It’s been re-upped every year since.

“He put these two sentences into the NASA appropriations bill largely because he felt that there was religious persecution in China and that democracies shouldn’t cooperate with communist countries,” says Joan Johnson-Freese, an expert on the Chinese space program and professor of national security affairs at the U.S. Naval War College. “There are certainly issues with China and technology transfer, but I think it is as much to do about politics as anything else.”

It was a fateful decision. The US blocked China from participating in collaborative projectslike the International Space Station, and the International Traffic in Arms Regulations —ITAR—blocked it from flying any payloads that contained American components. These exclusionary policies were meant to protect the military secrets of the US and its allies, but they also forced China’s government to develop the technology and expertise needed to become a major spacefaring power. “After a while they started to recognize that there were benefits to doing this on your own,” says Johnson-Freese. “As long as they were on their own, they controlled their program instead of American politics.”

Tianmen-1 is China’s most ambitious foray into deep space yet, and shows just how far the country’s space program has come in the past two decades. The nation hasn’t surpassed America’s extraterrestrial achievements just yet. But their Mars shot shows that the technological gulf between the two spacefaring nations is rapidly closing.

https://www.wired.com/story/chinas-first-mars-rover-launch-could-make-history/
 
Tianmen-1 is China’s most ambitious foray into deep space yet, and shows just how far the country’s space program has come in the past two decades. The nation hasn’t surpassed America’s extraterrestrial achievements just yet. But their Mars shot shows that the technological gulf between the two spacefaring nations is rapidly closing.
https://www.wired.com/story/chinas-first-mars-rover-launch-could-make-history/

Yes, it is sooooooooo much easier to copy someone else. Maybe China should do something new. Like return a rover from the surface of Mars with a sample. Oh, how bout this? It's easier still. Return something from the moon.
 
Hold my breath. First mission of China to the Mars, and try landing. Risky, but worth it.
 
Yes, it is sooooooooo much easier to copy someone else. Maybe China should do something new. Like return a rover from the surface of Mars with a sample. Oh, how bout this? It's easier still. Return something from the moon.
Care to explain how exactly sending a rover to Mars was "copied"? And how soooooooooooooooooo easy was it? Mr. Think Tank Truthseeker? Careful though, if it is that easy, aren't you risking lowering your own country's achievment? Goes around, comes around, doesn't it?:azn:
 
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Good luck China
 
China successfully launches interplanetary mission to Mars with rover in tow

The spacecraft should reach Mars in February 2021

By Loren Grush@lorengrush Jul 23, 2020, 1:34am EDT

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China has successfully launched its first major interplanetary mission to Mars. The launch begins a long seven-month journey through deep space, and once the mission reaches the Red Planet, China could become just the second nation ever to land and operate a rover on the Martian surface.

Called Tianwen-1, China’s mission consists of a Martian orbiter, lander, and rover. The trio launched on top of the Long March 5 from China’s Wenchang Spacecraft Launch Site in the early morning hours of July 23rd. The Long March 5 is one of China’s most powerful rockets, and this mission marked just the fourth launch ever for this type of vehicle.

Once they reach the Red Planet, all three spacecraft will work in tandem to study the geology of Mars and learn more about what might be lurking underneath the planet’s surface. While the orbiter will map and image Mars from above, the lander and rover will eventually make the nightmarish plunge down to the surface of Mars. If they make it to the ground intact, the lander will act as a delivery platform, providing a ramp for the rover to roll away and traverse the Martian terrain.

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Only the United States has been able to successfully land robotic spacecraft on Mars that can explore the surface. In fact, no other nation has had much success with landing anything on Mars. Europe has tried twice to land spacecraft on Mars, failing both times. The Soviet Union’s Mars 3 spacecraft did land in 1971 and communicated for about 20 seconds before going dark unexpectedly. If China’s landing is successful, it will have pulled off a feat that only NASA has mastered, elevating the nation into an elite tier of the global space community.

Tianwen-1 is actually the second mission headed to Mars this summer. The United Arab Emirates also launched its first interplanetary mission on July 19th, sending an orbiter called Hope to Mars that will study the planet’s weather. Next up is NASA, which is on track to launch its next Martian rover on July 30th. Called Perseverance, the rover is designed to look for signs of past life on Mars, as well as dig up samples of Martian dirt that may be returned to Earth one day for study.

https://www.theverge.com/2020/7/23/21334654/china-tianwen-1-mars-mission-launch-succssful
 
Yes, it is sooooooooo much easier to copy someone else. Maybe China should do something new. Like return a rover from the surface of Mars with a sample. Oh, how bout this? It's easier still. Return something from the moon.

They did land on the far side of the moon. Last time I checked, Mars doesn't belong to US, so anyone who's capable can go there.
 
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