#CNSA #ChinaNationalSpaceAdministration #国家航天局 |#BeltAndRoadinitiative #CLEP #February2021 | #VonKarmanCrater #LunarMission #Change4 #Yutu2 Lunar adventuring 652.62 Meters #LunaExploration Summary Completing that 27th day during #ChineseLunarNewYear festival two weeks …..

 

As of 19th February 2021 Friday, The CNSA –China National Space Administration Belt and Road Initiative Lunar Mission……Chang’e-4 successfully awakened completed the 2th day of the work period before the Chinese Lunar New Year – year of the OX …. .On the far back of the moon on the 103 Kilometer Von Karman diameter wide Crater, the Chang’e 4 lander and the “Yutu 2” lunar rover…….Chang’e 4 completed the 27th day of the month……….. When all three international Mars probes successfully reached Mars, the Chang’e 4 lander and the “Yutu 2” lunar rover on the back of the moon were at 13:30 on February 19 Finished the 27th day of the month at 01:48 and entered the moonlight dormancy. Up to now, Chang’e-4 has worked on the lunar surface for 778 Earth days, the lunar rover has a cumulative mileage of 652.62 meters, is in good condition, has energy balance, and all scientific loads are working normally. Continuous scientific output based on first-hand exploration data has revealed various scientific issues on the back of the moon in depth….

Previously As of 6th February 2021 Saturday , The CNSA –China National Space Administration Belt and Road Initiative Lunar Mission……Chang’e-4 successfully awakened and entered the 2th day of the work period before the Chinese Lunar New Year – year of the OX.. ….On the far back of the moon on the 103 Kilometer Von Karman diameter Crater , the Chang’e 4 lander and the “Yutu 2” lunar rover ended moon night dormancy at 16:48 and 4:26 on February 6th Hong Kong –Beijing time, and were awakened autonomously by light, and entered the 27th month day work period . Since the “Yutu-2” lunar rover reached the surface of the moon, it has travelled a total of about 628.5 meters. It is currently located northwest of the landing site, about 430 meters straight from the landing site.

Scientific exploration planned on the 27th day:

  • The panoramic camera selects the opportunity to take color images of rocks and impact craters.
  • (2) Drive to a rock block with a diameter of about 18cm to the southwest of the current lunar rover position, about 17.8m away from the current location, and use an infrared imaging spectrometer to detect the rock and the surrounding lunar soil.

Images and visuals are from Weibo CNSA –China National Space Administration –CLEP- China Luna Exploration Program..

#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 a course October direction heading towards the #UtopiaPlanitia #Mars For #中秋节 #MidAutumnFestival #ChinaNationalDay …

On the 9th October 2020 Friday  2300 hours Beijing time CNSA – China National Space Administration that under the control of the flight control team of China’s first Mars exploration mission, the main engine of the Tianwen-1 probe was ignited. In more than 480 seconds, the deep space manoeuvre was successfully completed. The orbital manoeuvre was carried out in deep space approximately 29.4 million kilometers from the earth. The orbit design of Tianwen-1 comprehensively considered various constraints from launch to Mars capture and made the propellant consumption as small as possible, and adopted the strategy of a deep space manoeuvre during the transfer process. The probe will rendezvous with Mars about 4 months after its current orbit, during which two or three midway corrections will be implemented……

Previous the last course correction … during 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.

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

#CNSA #ChinaNationalSpaceAdministration #國家航天局 |#BeltAndRoadinitiative |#火星 #加油#LongMarch5Y4 #ChangZheng5Y4 in preparations of deploying the First China’s #MartianLander #MartianRover #Tianwen1 from #文昌航天發射場 #WenchangSpacecraftLaunchCenter to journey to the Planet #Mars #APictorial ….

On 17th July 2020 today on a clear summery day at Wenchang Spacecraft Launch Center at Hainan Province- China- People’s Republic of China  one of many CNSA –China National Space Administration .. In which on an early morning day it was the first realize deployment of the Long March 5 Y4- Chang Zheng 5 Y4 among with the Tianwen One Martian Rover and Lander in which is set to launch on 23rd July 2020.. Or within the Late July August Launch Window…  The Belt and Road Initiative Martian program named Tianwen-1″ consists of three parts: an orbiter, a lander, and a patrol device, with a total mass of about 5 tons. The three major tasks of “winding, landing and patrolling” will be completed in one go.

 

Among it as a The Belt and Road Initiative Martian Tianwen One program- The planetary exploration engineering logo is printed on the front of the Long March 5 Yaosi Chang Zheng 5 Yaosi carrier rocket fairing, and the umbilical cord tower side The logos on the side are: China National Space Administration (CNSA), European Space Agency (ESA), French National Space Research Center (CNES), Argentine National Space Council (CONAE), Austrian Research Promotion Agency (FFG). 

 

 

It is the  fourth Long March 5 Yaosi Chang Zheng 5 Yaosi carrier rocket to be used to launch China’s first Mars exploration mission, was vertically transported to the launching area at the Wenchang Space Launch Center in south China’s Hainan Province on Friday. In which previously order to meet the needs of the mission, Xi’an Satellite Measurement and Control Center has recently adapted the ground measurement and control communication system. At present, the renovation work and various targeted tests have been fully completed, and the performance indicators meet the mission needs of “Tianwen No. 1”. When the “Tianwen 1” Mars probe successfully entered the earth fire turn…It’ll enter towards its landing site the Utopia Planitia  of  landing attempt, with each site having a landing ellipse of approximately 100 by 40 kilometres….

The new Chinese Mars spacecraft, consisting of an orbiter and a lander (with an attached rover) is developed by the China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation (CASC), and managed by the National Space Science Centre (NSSC) in Beijing. The lander portion of the spacecraft will use a parachute, retrorockets, and an airbag in order to achieve landing on the Martian surface. If the landing is successful, the lander would then release a rover. Said rover will be powered by solar panels and is expected to probe the Martian surface with radar and to perform chemical analyses on the soil; it would also look for biomolecules and biosignatures. …..

 

The aims of the mission may include the following: find evidence for current and past life, produce Martian surface maps, characterize Martian soil composition and water ice distribution, examine the Martian atmosphere, and in particular, its ionosphere, among others. Simulated Martian landings have been performed as part of mission preparations by the Beijing Institute of Space Mechanics and Electricity…..

During this year, it was China Space Day there was many Celebrations across the country, in which of the light of Covid-19 been contained … in which that didn’t deter celebrating country wide celebrating is a while worthy project in which is the first country’s mission to Mars, finally named on 24th April 2020 is Mars exploration mission named Tianwen No. 1 【转转! 火星 我们 来 了 [加油] at present, China CNSA – China National Space Administration among with its sister organisation is carrying out the development of the first Mars exploration project. According to the plan, in 2020, China will launch the Mars Rover through the Long March V, and achieve Mars orbit, landing and patrol detection through one launch. After the probe is launched, it will take about 7 months to reach Mars…..

The orbiter and rover will carry a total of 12 instruments

Orbiter

Medium Resolution Camera (MRC) with a resolution of 100 m from a 400 km orbit

High Resolution Camera (HRC) with a resolution of 2 m from a 400 km orbit

Mars Magnetometer (MM)

Mars Mineral Spectrometer (MMS), to determine elementary composition

Orbiter Subsurface Radar (OSR)

Mars Ion and Neutral Particle Analyzer (MINPA)

Rover

Ground-Penetrating Radar (GPR), to image about 100 metres below the Martian surface

Mars Surface Magnetic Field Detector (MSMFD)

Mars Meteorological Measurement Instrument (MMMI)

Mars Surface Compound Detector (MSCD)

Multi-Spectrum Camera (MSC)

Navigation and Topography Camera (NTC

Images and visuals are from Weibo