Beijing, February 11: After a nearly seven-month voyage from Earth, China's Tianwen-1 probe successfully has entered the orbit around Mars. After entering the Mars orbit, payloads aboard the orbiter, including cameras and various particle analyzers, will next start working and carry out surveys of the planet, Xinhua reported.
"Tianwen-1 entered the orbit around Mars on Wednesday exactly as it was designed," said Zhang Rongqiao, Chief Designer of China's first Mars exploration mission. China Declares First Solo Mars Mission 'Tianwen 1' Launch a Success.
"We are looking forward to a successful landing on Mars." It marks the first time that a Chinese spacecraft has orbited an extraterrestrial planet, he noted.
The development marks China's completion of a key step in its current Mars exploration program, which is designed to complete orbiting, landing and roving in one mission, said the China National Space Administration (CNSA).
Tianwen-1 was launched via a Long March-5 rocket, China's largest launch vehicle, from the Wenchang Spacecraft Launch Site on the coast of southern China's island province of Hainan on July 23, 2020. China's Mars Probe Travels More Than 400 Million km.
Tianwen-1 has been travelling in space for 202 days. It has carried out four orbital corrections and a deep-space manoeuvre. It has flown 475 million km and was 192 million km from Earth when it reached the Mars orbit.
Tianwen-1 will now conduct multiple orbital corrections to enter a temporary Mars parking orbit, surveying potential landing sites in preparation to land in May or June.
Earlier on Tuesday, the United Arab Emirates' (UAE) Mars mission, the Hope Probe, successfully entered the Red Planet's orbit.
(The above story first appeared on LatestLY on Feb 12, 2021 01:11 PM IST. For more news and updates on politics, world, sports, entertainment and lifestyle, log on to our website latestly.com).