On its first try, China's Zhurong rover hit a Mars milestone by Sara Webb and Rebecca Allen | Swinbune University Melbourne, Australia (The Conversation) May 20, 2021
China's Zhurong rover landed safely on Mars on May 15, making China only the third country to successfully land a rover on the red planet. More impressively still, China is the first Mars-going nation to carry out an orbiting, landing and rovering operation as its first mission. Planetary scientist Roberto Orosei told Nature China is "doing in a single go what NASA took decades to do", while astrophysicist Jonathon McDowell described China's decision to include a rover in its maiden Mars outing as a "very gutsy move".
Where did it land? This area of Mars was formed billions of years ago, when a martian meteorite smashed into the planet's surface. The surrounding area is largely featureless, covered mostly in volcanic material. Zhurong is not the first rover to explore this region. In 1976, NASA's Viking 2 lander touched down further north within the Utopia Planitia basin, returning high-resolution images of the martian surface and analysing soil samples. The Viking 2 lander lacked the ability to investigate any further than its initial landing site. But the Zhurong rover should be well equipped to roam farther afield during its mission.
What will it do? Zhurong's design, instruments and technology on board Zhurong are comparable to those on board NASA's twin rovers Spirit and Opportunity, which touched down in January 2004. Although Zhurong is not at the cutting edge of current space exploration technology, the sheer speed of this program's development since its initiation in 2006 is awe-inspiring. Like the many Mars rovers before it, Zhurong will probe this alien planet's environment, and search for signs of water ice on the surface. The mission is expected to survey four aspects of its local environmnet: + topography and geological structure + soil structure and possible presence of water ice + chemical composition, minerals and rock types + physical characteristics of the atmosphere and the rocky surface. Zhurong will thus help build a more complete geological picture of the red planet's history. And, in a genuine first for Martian exploration, it is equipped with a magnetometer to measure the planet's magnetic field. This is an important study that will help address why Mars has lost much of its atmosphere, leaving its landscape so barren.
China's growing space presence Last month, China launched the first stage of its Tiangong space station, which next year is set to become the world's second long-term home for humans in space. The momentous launch didn't go off without a hitch, however, as debris from the launch vehicle made an uncontrolled re-entry back to Earth, eventually splashing down in the Indian Ocean. Thankfully no one was hurt in that incident, but it is a timely reminder that China's accelerating pace of space missions and rocket launches need to be carefully managed. This year of activity has solidified China's powerful presence in space, and we are only seeing the beginning of its ambitious future. By 2045, China hopes to become a leading space power, as outlined in the 2018 Aerospace Science and Technology Corporations route map. In the coming years we can look forward to seeing China launch crewed missions to the Tiangong space station, and in the coming decades can expect to see China join other space-faring nations in missions back to the Moon and Mars.
Volcanoes on Mars could be active, raise possibility of recent habitable conditions Tucson AZ (SPX) May 07, 2021 Evidence of recent volcanic activity on Mars shows that eruptions could have taken place within the past 50,000 years, a paper by Planetary Science Institute Research Scientist David Horvath says. Most volcanism on the red planet occurred between 3 and 4 billion years ago, with smaller eruptions in isolated locales continuing perhaps as recently as 3 million years ago. But, until now, there was no evidence to indicate whether Mars could still be volcanically active. Using data from satellite ... read more
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