#CNSA #ChinaNationalSpaceAdministration #國家航天局 |#BeltAndRoadinitiative #October2020 |长征五号 #LongMarch5 #ChangZheng5 #CMS fragment fuselage found in a #香港 #HongKongSAR #PaklaBay Beach ashore..

On a 4th October 2020, During the eight day Holiday in China- People’s Republic of China, in which celebrating China’s National Day also on the Same Day is the Mid-Autumn festival in which is a massive celebration throughout the Asian communities.. In which watching TVB early Moring News this morning having breakfast noticing in the footage appears to be seen…..

During the national holiday season a fragment of a fairing suspected to be a Long March rocket was found in Pak La Bay, Sai Kung, and Hong Kong SAR-China-PROC…  The police sent police officers to the scene early in the morning to surround the fragments and wait for relevant departments to send personnel to the scene for inspection. The fragments are printed with the Chinese characters “heading” and the serial number “8Y325A-5B S02-01”, and the broken blue English acronym “CMS” in the center part, which is China Manned Space. There is a blue Chinese manned space logo. After the fairing fragments were exposed,

In which the CSNA-China National Space Administration Long March Chang Zheng 5B Carrier Rocket was During the launch of the CNSA –China National Space Administration Iconic Long  March 5B -ChangZheng 5B Heavy Medium Carrier Rocket that Launched on 5th May 2020 at Wenchang Spacecraft Launch Center – Hainan Province -China -People’s Republic of China… in which during that time it was to test flight a new testing Command Module in which that  replacing the Shenzhou Command Module in which inspired the name for the Walker Class in Star Trek Discovery in which was featured in the Battle of the Binary Stars the Precursor of the Klingon war.. …. perform its first flight mission at the Wenchang space launch site in China at 18:00 Hong Kong -Beijing Time…

During deployment of the new Command Module, the Next Generation of the Module in which it returned safety with all the expectations landing at Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center that following days  afternoon, and then the return module will be transported to Beijing to carry out subsequent relevant verification work to see if any other modifications that’s need to be ready for a manned flight towards the CNSA –CSS- China Space Station ……

Images and visuals are from weibo

#CNSA #ChinaNationalSpaceAdministration #國家航天局 |#BeltAndRoadinitiative #October2020 |#火星 # 天問 #天问一号 #LongMarch5 #ChangZheng5 #TianwenOne #MarsMission #Marslander #MarsRover #MarsProbe does the ultimate #Selfies #SpaceSelfie heading towards the #UtopiaPlanitia #Mars For #中秋节 #MidAutumnFestival #ChinaNationalDay …

On October 1st 2020, as China- People’s Republic of China also throughout the Chinese also the Asian Communities celebrates the National Day and Mid-Autumn Festival, CNSA China National Space Administration released China’s first Mars exploration mission Tianwen-1 exploration….. The image of the CNSA Belt and Road Initiative European Space Agency collaboration Martian Probe flying, the five-star red flag on the picture is dazzling, showing a bright Chinese red. This is the first deep space self-portrait of our country 天问一号 Martian probe. In the vast universe, the silver landing patrol device and the golden orbiter are shining brightly. Tianwen No.1 uses this to report safety to China and express birthday wishes.

Since this CNSA China – PROC’s first independent Mars exploration project was established, how to do a good job of visual monitoring of the working status of the Mars rover in orbit has become one of the important tasks facing the development team. In order to obtain the full picture of the “Tianwen No. 1” in the process of rushing to the fire, the Mars Orbiter Engineering Measurement Sub-system Team of the Eighth Academy specially designed a set of “little guys” with “small quality, small size and low energy consumption” “Composed of monitoring system.

As we all know, when taking selfies on the ground, you can use auxiliary tools such as selfie sticks to shoot after choosing the angle, light and shadow, but the selfie of “Tianwen No. 1” is not that simple. Due to its large size, if the selfie stick strategy is adopted, “Tianwen No.1” needs to use a 15-meter-long selfie stick to achieve a full-view selfie, which not only consumes resources, but is also prone to safety risks. For this reason, the Mars Orbiter Engineering Survey Sub-system Team of the Eighth Academy of Sciences proposed a “separated monitoring plan”, which is to “throw out” a light camera under suitable lighting conditions to take pictures of “Tianwen No. 1” and transmit the images in real time. Go back to the “Tianwen No. 1” probe.

Have you seen a one-time dual-head super wifi camera?

In order to successfully implement the separate monitoring program, the Eighth Academy Mars Orbiter Engineering Measurement Sub-system team needs a little guy who can “divide, shoot clearly, pass back, and hold on”: use a small, small, low-impact unlocking separation device The camera can be “divided out”; the use of colour imaging, the configuration of 800×600, 1600X1200 two-level resolution camera allows the image to be “clearly captured”; the use of super Wi-Fi communication that can achieve 400 meters of wireless communication allows data “Passed back”; the use of disposable batteries that can provide power for longer than 1 hour allows the camera to “hold on”, allowing the ground to see the full picture of the “Tianwen No. 1” rushing to the fire.

Considering that the camera may turn over as it gradually moves away from the detector, the development team designed the camera as a dual-headed front and back to ensure that the camera can capture as many detector images as possible during the turning process. After four years of research and development, this little guy weighing about 950g successfully carried the “Tianwen-1” Mars probe into space, and successfully separated the head weighing about 680g, and obtained a clear image. Successfully completed the overall visual monitoring task of “Tianwen No. 1”

The name “Tianwen”: 天問 ….. Comes from the long poem of the same name written by Qu Yuan (about 340–278 BC), one of the greatest poets of Ancient China. It is a poem of a series of questions starting with how the universe was created….

Images and visuals are from Weibo