China’s Zhurong rover takes first drive on Mars

Latest feat makes China first nation to orbit, land and deploy vehicle on red planet

A remote-controlled Chinese motorised rover drove down the ramp of its landing capsule on Saturday and on to the surface of Mars, making China the first nation to orbit, land and deploy a land vehicle on its inaugural mission to the red planet.

Zhurong, named after a mythical Chinese god of fire, drove down to the surface of Mars at 10.40am Beijing time (2.40am GMT), according to the rover’s official Chinese social media account.

China this month joined the United States as the only nations to deploy land vehicles on Mars. The former Soviet Union landed a craft in 1971, but it lost communication seconds later.

The 240kg Zhurong, which has six scientific instruments including a high-resolution topography camera, will study the planet’s surface soil and atmosphere.

READ MORE

Powered by solar energy, Zhurong will also look for signs of ancient life, including any subsurface water and ice, using a ground-penetrating radar during its 90-day exploration of the planet’s surface.

Zhurong will move and stop in slow intervals, with each interval estimated to be just 10 metres over three days, according to the official China Space News.

“The slow progress of the rover was due to the limited understanding of the Martian environment, so a relatively conservative working mode was specially designed,” Jia Yang, an engineer involved in the mission, told China Space News.

Autonomous

Jia said he would not rule out a faster pace in the later stage of the rover’s mission, depending on its operational state at the time.

Jia said the rover was designed to be highly autonomous because the distance to Mars, at 320 million km, means a signal takes 40 minutes to travel both ways, posing a hurdle for real-time control of the rover.

Martian temperatures are also a problem, he said: a nighttime drop to minus 130 degrees freezes carbon dioxide, covering the uneven ground with a layer of dry ice – a terrain risk for the rover.

Zhurong has an automated suspension system that can lift and lower its chassis by 60cm, the only rover with such a capability, according to China Space News.

The rover is covered by nano-aerogel plates to protect its body from the cold.

Dust storms could also affect the rover’s ability to generate power through its solar panels, Jia said. To overcome this, the panel surface is made with a material that cannot be easily stained by dust and can easily shake dust off by vibration, he said.

Tianwen-1

China’s uncrewed Tianwen-1 spacecraft blasted off from the southern Chinese island of Hainan in July last year. After more than six months in transit, Tianwen-1 reached the red planet in February, where it has been in orbit since.

On May 15th, the landing capsule carrying the rover separated from Tianwen-1 and touched down on a vast plain known as Utopia Planitia, believed to be the site of an ancient ocean.

The first images taken by the rover were released by the Chinese space agency on Wednesday.

The co-ordinates of the landing site are 109.9 degrees east and 25.1 degrees north, China Space News said.

Tianwen-1 was one of three probes that reached Mars in February.

US rover Perseverance touched down on February 18th in a huge depression called Jezero crater, more than 2,000km from Utopia Planitia.

Hope – the third spacecraft to arrive in February – is not designed to land. Launched by the United Arab Emirates, it is orbiting above Mars, gathering data on its weather and atmosphere.

Perseverance and Zhurong are among three robotic rovers operating on Mars. The third is Nasa’s Curiosity, which landed in 2012.

Nasa’s InSight, which arrived on the surface of the planet in 2018 to study its interior, is a stationary module. – Reuters