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China's Mars Probe Tianwen-1 Sends Back Video of Red Planet After Successfully Entering Orbit

White craters are visible on the surface of Mars, fading from white to black through the video.

China's Mars Probe Tianwen-1 Sends Back Video of Red Planet After Successfully Entering Orbit

Photo Credit: China National Space Administration

A black and white picture of Mars taken by Tianwen 1, the first snapshot from the Chinese craft

Highlights
  • Tianwen-1 launched around the same time as a rival US mission
  • Chinese scientists hope to land a 240-kilogram rover in May in Utopia
  • The mission will take photos, chart maps, and look for signs of past life
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China's space agency released video footage from its spacecraft circling Mars on Friday, two days after it successfully entered the planet's orbit in Beijing's latest ambitious space mission.

In the video, published by state broadcaster CCTV, the surface of the planet is seen coming into view out of a pitch black sky against the outside of the Tianwen-1, which entered the orbit of the Red Planet on Wednesday.

White craters are visible on the planet's surface, which fades from white to black through the video as the probe flies over the course of one Martian day, said official news agency Xinhua.

The five-tonne Tianwen-1 - which translates as "Questions to Heaven" - includes a Mars orbiter, a lander and a solar-powered rover and launched from southern China last July.

It is the latest step in Beijing's space programme, which aims to establish a crewed space station by 2022 and eventually put an astronaut on the moon, and has opened up a new, extraterrestrial arena for US-China competition. 

Tianwen-1 launched around the same time as a rival US mission, and is expected to touch down on the surface of the planet in May.

Its success comes the same week as the United Arab Emirates' Hope probe also successfully entered Mars' orbit - making history as the Arab world's first interplanetary mission. 

Chinese scientists hope to land a 240-kilogram (530-pound) rover in May in Utopia, a massive impact basin on Mars. Its orbiter will last for a Martian year. 

For the three-month study of the planet's soil and atmosphere, the mission will take photos, chart maps, and look for signs of past life.

The probe has already sent back its first image of Mars - a black-and-white photo that showed geological features including the Schiaparelli crater and the Valles Marineris, a vast stretch of canyons on the Martian surface.

Mars has proved to be a challenging target, with most missions since 1960, sent by Russia, Europe, Japan, and India, ending in failure.

NASA's Perseverance, which is set to touch down on the Red Planet on February 18, will become the fifth rover to complete the voyage since 1997 - and all so far have been American.


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