As the race to defeat Mars intensifies some of Earth’s countries, the deceptive direction toward the red planet is increasingly busy. This month alone, 3 countries are finishing trips to Mars, taking advantage of the rare launch window. (Lose this opportunity, wait 26 months for the planets to be well aligned again).)
On Sunday, the United Arab Emirates (UAE) announced their first Mars spacecraft, the Hope Mars orbiter, a Japanese rocket (H-IIA) from Japan’s Tanegashima Sspeed Center.
The Hope mission, the official best friend known as the Emirates Mars mission, is a component of the Emirati government’s grand plan to transform the country’s oil economy into a more knowledge-based economy. If all goes according to plan, the Hope spacecraft will reach Mars orbit in early 2021, then study the red planet in a weekly orbit for a minimum of a year on Mars, roughly corresponding to two Earth years.
Next Thursday, China can also be expected to release its own misidirect to Mars, which includes an orbiter, a lander and a scout vehicle. The assignment, called Tianwen-1 (meaning “heavenly questions”), is China’s first full interplanetary exploration effort. Few data on the assignment is made public. The rover would have a radar that would pass through the gcircular designed to look for evidence of gcircular water.
A March 5 rocket with the Mars sspeedcraft installed on Friday on its launch pad at the Wenchang Sspeed Launch Cinput in Southern China’s Hainan Province.
“The next release allocation has been highly identified and supported through the foreign community,” Chinese national television Ge Xiaochun, a leading engineer with China’s National Speed Administration, said last week. “The vertical game of the rocket towards the launch of the cargo showed that we had prepared well for the launch assignment. We will continue with the stern and prudent attitude in the coming days.”
Later this month, on July 30, NASA will launch its Perseverance For Life rover, making it the eleventh Mars dress sent across the United States.
The six-wheeled rover targets Je0 Crater, a position on Mars that scientists say used to be a lake where the Micgowns may also have lived. The assignment carries a small helicopter equipped with a favorable camera to explore the landing site and identify pleasant places to navigate through the rover.
If the Perseverance rover detects carbon and sees a trend in a rock that may also have been left alone through life, gather those rock samples and place them in a container for a long journey erroneously to return them to Earth.
If all goes well, the Perseverance rover will land on February 18, 2021. You can watch the launch opportunity on NASA’s official website or on your YouTube channel.
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