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China Says Its Mars Landing Technology Is Ready for 2020

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China Says Its Mars Landing Technology Is Ready for 2020
Spacecraft propulsion systems are ready for China’s daring touchdown attempt on the red planet
By Andrew Jones
China says it’s ready to attempt something only NASA has so far achieved—successfully landing a rover on Mars.


It will be China’s first independent attempt at an interplanetary mission, and comes with two ambitious goals. Launching in 2020, China’s Mars mission will attempt to put a probe in orbit around Mars and, separately, land a rover on the red planet.

The mission was approved in early 2016 but updates have few and far between. Last week, a terse update (available here in Chinese) from the Xi'an Aerospace Propulsion Institute, a subsidiary of CASC, China's main space contractor, revealed that the spacecraft’s propulsion system had passed all necessary tests.

According to the report, the Shanghai Institute of Space Propulsion has completed tests of the spacecraft's propulsion system for the hovering, hazard avoidance, slow-down, and landing stages of a Mars landing attempt. The successful tests verified the performance and control of the propulsion system, in which one engine producing 7,500 Newtons of thrust will provide the majority of force required to decelerate the spacecraft for landing.

Having previously completed tests of supersonic parachutes needed to slow the craft’s entry into the Martian atmosphere, this means China’s Mars spacecraft is close to ready for its mission.

China was initially considering several sites within two broad landing areas near Chryse Planitia, close to the landing sites of Viking 1 and Pathfinder, and another covering Isidis Planitia and stretching to the western edge of the Elysium Mons region.

According to a presentation at the European Planetary Science Congress-Division for Planetary Sciences Joint Meeting in Geneva in September, China has now chosen two preliminary sites near Utopia Planitia. The mission will have landing ellipses—the areas in which the spacecraft is statistically likely to land—of around 100 x 40 kilometers.

China’s solar-powered Mars rover will, at 240 kilograms, be twice the mass of China’s two lunar rovers. It will carry navigation, topography, and multispectral cameras, a subsurface detection radar, a laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy instrument similar to Curiosity’s LIBS instrument, a Martian surface magnetic field detector, and a climate detector.

The orbiter will be equipped with a suite of science instruments including moderate- and high-resolution imagers. The pair of cameras will be used once in Mars orbit to image the preselected landing sites ahead of separation of the orbiter and rover.

The main barrier to China launching its mission is the status of the Long March 5 rocket required to get the 5-metric-ton spacecraft on its way to Mars.

The Long March 5 is China’s largest launch vehicle, which had its first flight in 2016. However the second launch, in July 2017, failed to achieve orbit. Following at least two redesigns of the engines which power the rocket’s first stage, the Long March 5 is now ready to return to flight.

The rocket is currently being assembled at the Wenchang Satellite Launch Center on Hainan island in southern China, with launch expected in late December. The mission will aim to send a large satellite into geostationary orbit, and in doing so prove the rocket is ready for the later Mars mission launch.

If all goes well, China will join NASA’s Mars 2020 mission, the United Arab Emirates’ Hope Mars Mission and, if parachute issues can be overcome, the ExoMars 2020 mission, in launching during a roughly three-week window from late July to early August 2020. With the advantage of favorable relative positions of Earth and Mars at that time—creating an efficient path known as the Hohmann transfer—the spacecraft would arrive at the red planet around February 2021.

If the Long March 5 does not come through its big test in late December, China will need to wait 26 months before the next Hohmann transfer window opens for Mars, in late 2022.

Getting to Mars is only part of the job. China has already landed spacecraft on the near and far sides of the moon, and members of the successful 2013 Chang’e-3 lunar mission team were assigned to the Mars project. However, landing on Mars presents extra challenges.

The surface gravity of Mars is just 38 percent that of Earth. Simulating the Martian gravitational field adds complexity to terrestrial testing of entry, descent, and landing (EDL) sequences.

Mars has an atmosphere which is too thin to properly aid descent, but thick enough to threaten fast-moving spacecraft with extreme heat from atmospheric friction and compression. This requires a spacecraft to have a heat shield and complex parachute systems which need to be deployed and jettisoned at precisely the right moments.

When the spacecraft arrives at Mars, it will be around 150 million kilometers from Earth, meaning commands traveling at the speed of light will take around 8 minutes to reach their target. This means the entire landing process must be automated. For NASA’s 2012 landing of the Curiosity rover, the team called this period the “7 minutes of terror.”

Several Mars missions have failed during that critical stage, including a 2016 effort by the European Space Agency and Roscosmos of Russia to plant the ExoMars Schiaparelli EDM lander, as well as numerous Soviet missions and NASA’s attempt with its 1999 Mars Polar Lander.

https://spectrum.ieee.org/tech-talk...its-mars-landing-technology-is-ready-for-2020
 
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God speed to our Chinese brethren.
 
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Gotta love China's grand strategy (do anything to steal attention away from Tokyo 2020 Summer Olympics). Then go for the smack home run with 2022 Winter Olympics. We're gonna see more than Mars mission in 2020 depending on how big of a threat China sees 2020 shining on Tokyo...
 
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China Says Its Mars Landing Technology Is Ready for 2020
Spacecraft propulsion systems are ready for China’s daring touchdown attempt on the red planet
By Andrew Jones
China says it’s ready to attempt something only NASA has so far achieved—successfully landing a rover on Mars.


It will be China’s first independent attempt at an interplanetary mission, and comes with two ambitious goals. Launching in 2020, China’s Mars mission will attempt to put a probe in orbit around Mars and, separately, land a rover on the red planet.

The mission was approved in early 2016 but updates have few and far between. Last week, a terse update (available here in Chinese) from the Xi'an Aerospace Propulsion Institute, a subsidiary of CASC, China's main space contractor, revealed that the spacecraft’s propulsion system had passed all necessary tests.

According to the report, the Shanghai Institute of Space Propulsion has completed tests of the spacecraft's propulsion system for the hovering, hazard avoidance, slow-down, and landing stages of a Mars landing attempt. The successful tests verified the performance and control of the propulsion system, in which one engine producing 7,500 Newtons of thrust will provide the majority of force required to decelerate the spacecraft for landing.

Having previously completed tests of supersonic parachutes needed to slow the craft’s entry into the Martian atmosphere, this means China’s Mars spacecraft is close to ready for its mission.

China was initially considering several sites within two broad landing areas near Chryse Planitia, close to the landing sites of Viking 1 and Pathfinder, and another covering Isidis Planitia and stretching to the western edge of the Elysium Mons region.

According to a presentation at the European Planetary Science Congress-Division for Planetary Sciences Joint Meeting in Geneva in September, China has now chosen two preliminary sites near Utopia Planitia. The mission will have landing ellipses—the areas in which the spacecraft is statistically likely to land—of around 100 x 40 kilometers.

China’s solar-powered Mars rover will, at 240 kilograms, be twice the mass of China’s two lunar rovers. It will carry navigation, topography, and multispectral cameras, a subsurface detection radar, a laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy instrument similar to Curiosity’s LIBS instrument, a Martian surface magnetic field detector, and a climate detector.

The orbiter will be equipped with a suite of science instruments including moderate- and high-resolution imagers. The pair of cameras will be used once in Mars orbit to image the preselected landing sites ahead of separation of the orbiter and rover.

The main barrier to China launching its mission is the status of the Long March 5 rocket required to get the 5-metric-ton spacecraft on its way to Mars.

The Long March 5 is China’s largest launch vehicle, which had its first flight in 2016. However the second launch, in July 2017, failed to achieve orbit. Following at least two redesigns of the engines which power the rocket’s first stage, the Long March 5 is now ready to return to flight.

The rocket is currently being assembled at the Wenchang Satellite Launch Center on Hainan island in southern China, with launch expected in late December. The mission will aim to send a large satellite into geostationary orbit, and in doing so prove the rocket is ready for the later Mars mission launch.

If all goes well, China will join NASA’s Mars 2020 mission, the United Arab Emirates’ Hope Mars Mission and, if parachute issues can be overcome, the ExoMars 2020 mission, in launching during a roughly three-week window from late July to early August 2020. With the advantage of favorable relative positions of Earth and Mars at that time—creating an efficient path known as the Hohmann transfer—the spacecraft would arrive at the red planet around February 2021.

If the Long March 5 does not come through its big test in late December, China will need to wait 26 months before the next Hohmann transfer window opens for Mars, in late 2022.

Getting to Mars is only part of the job. China has already landed spacecraft on the near and far sides of the moon, and members of the successful 2013 Chang’e-3 lunar mission team were assigned to the Mars project. However, landing on Mars presents extra challenges.

The surface gravity of Mars is just 38 percent that of Earth. Simulating the Martian gravitational field adds complexity to terrestrial testing of entry, descent, and landing (EDL) sequences.

Mars has an atmosphere which is too thin to properly aid descent, but thick enough to threaten fast-moving spacecraft with extreme heat from atmospheric friction and compression. This requires a spacecraft to have a heat shield and complex parachute systems which need to be deployed and jettisoned at precisely the right moments.

When the spacecraft arrives at Mars, it will be around 150 million kilometers from Earth, meaning commands traveling at the speed of light will take around 8 minutes to reach their target. This means the entire landing process must be automated. For NASA’s 2012 landing of the Curiosity rover, the team called this period the “7 minutes of terror.”

Several Mars missions have failed during that critical stage, including a 2016 effort by the European Space Agency and Roscosmos of Russia to plant the ExoMars Schiaparelli EDM lander, as well as numerous Soviet missions and NASA’s attempt with its 1999 Mars Polar Lander.

https://spectrum.ieee.org/tech-talk...its-mars-landing-technology-is-ready-for-2020

I'm more interested in the space station.
 
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I hope China does it on January 1st 2020 on the day in which India becomes a SuperPower.
 
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Is this going to do the same stuff currently being done by Curiosity rover or is this going to serve some other purpose?

Atleast as far space exploration is concerned countries should work together to achieve different objectives rather than repeat same endeavor to show they have achieved same technical prowess too imo
 
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Is this going to do the same stuff currently being done by Curiosity rover or is this going to serve some other purpose?

Atleast as far space exploration is concerned countries should work together to achieve different objectives rather than repeat same endeavor to show they have achieved same technical prowess too imo
Cold War 2.0.
 
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Is this going to do the same stuff currently being done by Curiosity rover or is this going to serve some other purpose?

Atleast as far space exploration is concerned countries should work together to achieve different objectives rather than repeat same endeavor to show they have achieved same technical prowess too imo
so basically you are saying we don't need to land more rovers on mars because we already landed a golf cart on it? you realize that mars is a large place and the area explored by Curiosity is only less then .0001% :cuckoo:
 
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Gotta love China's grand strategy (do anything to steal attention away from Tokyo 2020 Summer Olympics). Then go for the smack home run with 2022 Winter Olympics. We're gonna see more than Mars mission in 2020 depending on how big of a threat China sees 2020 shining on Tokyo...
LOL What are you talking about?

Is this going to do the same stuff currently being done by Curiosity rover or is this going to serve some other purpose?

Atleast as far space exploration is concerned countries should work together to achieve different objectives rather than repeat same endeavor to show they have achieved same technical prowess too imo
To be fair, i'm sure that you won't be saying the same thing if it was India that was about to launch an Orbiter, lander and rover to Mars. :D Let's all learn to appreciate what other countries do that benefits mankind irrespective of nationality.
 
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so basically you are saying we don't need to land more rovers on mars because we already landed a golf cart on it? you realize that mars is a large place and the area explored by Curiosity is only less then .0001% :cuckoo:
What you expect from sourgraped?

Is this going to do the same stuff currently being done by Curiosity rover or is this going to serve some other purpose?

Atleast as far space exploration is concerned countries should work together to achieve different objectives rather than repeat same endeavor to show they have achieved same technical prowess too imo
Then tell me why India need to try land a rover on Lunar since China already done it twice. What you are doing is extra, can I say that? You are just a jealous Indian too humiliate over your failed landing on lunar that you need to raise this kind of stupid inquiry. Why even India need to attempt to put man on space since US, Russia and China had already done it?

And dont you know, US banned NASA to work with CNSA. You think China can cooperate with the american racist? No, China need to do everything on their own and depend on nobody. Fortunately, China is too big and powerful that China has the ability to do it on their own. The ISS will close down soon. China space station will takeover ISS. France, Germany, Italy, Japan and Russia will join China Space station for little fee since China will sponsor most of the module project. The ESA of course will take this opportunity to continue work in space for their project with little fee and no fund needed compare to ISS where ESA members need to fork out huge fund under the condition set by US.

China will force out US from China space station project. ISS can only survive with funds pour out from ESA members. But ESA is not stupid enough to continue with ISS. US is broke, they have no way to further fund ISS project unless they cut down a number of their CVN to fund NASA. Mark my words. It will happen and unfold in next few years time.
 
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LOL What are you talking about?


To be fair, i'm sure that you won't be saying the same thing if it was India that was about to launch an Orbiter, lander and rover to Mars. :D Let's all learn to appreciate what other countries do that benefits mankind irrespective of nationality.

You are doubting my intentions because of my username. As far as space exploration is concerned, I don't think it should be about country or a race.

That China is doing it is great, but it would serve humanity greater purpose if it was doing something additional to what Nasa is already doing in Mars and that exactly was my question, is this mission doing that? If not, still great stuff but in future space agencies should have open communications.

why India need to try land a rover on Lunar since China already done it twice.

India tried to land in a part where no one else had, to understand that part better.

And dont you know, US banned NASA to work with CNSA. You think China can cooperate with the american racist?

That's wrong imo. Like I've said in my previous post, as far as space agency is concerned the agencies shouldn't treat it as technology war or ego battle like the cold war days.

But I guess that might not be the case after all
 
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You are doubting my intentions because of my username. As far as space exploration is concerned, I don't think it should be about country or a race.

That China is doing it is great, but it would serve humanity greater purpose if it was doing something additional to what Nasa is already doing in Mars and that exactly was my question, is this mission doing that? If not, still great stuff but in future space agencies should have open communications.



India tried to land in a part where no one else had, to understand that part better.



That's wrong imo. Like I've said in my previous post, as far as space agency is concerned the agencies shouldn't treat it as technology war or ego battle like the cold war days.

But I guess that might not be the case after all
See how your double standard show... You claim Indian Land at places of lunar no one do it before. Same as China Mars rover landed on part of Mars no one do it before? Why the different attitude you give regards to China Mars mission. I am right about your jealousy. You shall ask US federal why they mixed politics with science and not telling China this. US is the one banning cooperation and not China. NASA is banned from working with CNSA. They will never share any crucial Mars data with China. So what kind of redundancy you are talking about regards to China Mars landing? You think just becos you come here and talk trash and it will derail China space ambition? What are you thinking?
 
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