After the United Arab Emirates on Monday, China. The Asian giant launched Thursday, July 23 a probe bound for Mars and plans to deploy a rover on its surface to explore the planet for 90 days.

The machine was propelled by a Long-March 5 rocket which took off from the base of Wenchang, on the Chinese island of Hainan (south). The authorities have yet to confirm the success of the launch in the coming hours.

The Tianwen-1 mission ("Questions to the sky-1") will embark a probe composed of three elements: an observation orbiter (which will revolve around the red planet), a lander and a remote-controlled robot (responsible for analyzing the ground Martian).

China is not alone in wanting to send a probe to Mars this year. The United Arab Emirates launched theirs (“Hope”) on Monday and the United States will launch one (“March 2020”) on July 30.

If successful, the launch would give Beijing a boost in prestige against Washington, which has just ordered the closure of the Chinese consulate in Houston, the latest avatar of the intense rivalry between the two Pacific giants.

A good time to travel to Mars

Space powers are taking advantage of the current reduced distance between Earth and the red planet. A distance that is still around 55 million kilometers - the equivalent of nearly 5,000 Paris-New York round trips. To travel this long distance, it will take about seven months for the Chinese probe, which is due to arrive in February 2021 in the gravity field of Mars.

Tianwen-1 is "similar to the American Viking missions of 1975-1976" in terms of "scale and ambition," Jonathan McDowell, astronomer at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics in the United States, told AFP. United.

"I do not expect her to do anything significant compared to American achievements," he said, referring to the multiple probes and robots sent to Mars by NASA.

China wants to catch up

Long away from the fierce US-USSR space competition during the Cold War, the Asian country is patiently catching up.

He sent his first man into space in 2003, landed small robots (the "Jade Rabbits") on the Moon in 2013 and 2019, and just completed in June to set up the constellation of satellites of its Beidou navigation system - rival of the American GPS.

Its Martian mission is the next big step in its program, which also calls for the construction of a space station by 2022.

"The fact that China joins (in the conquest of Mars) will change the current situation which has been dominated by the United States for half a century," said Chen Lan, analyst at GoTaikonauts.com, specializing in the program. Chinese space. "From the point of view of all of humanity, this is a positive thing."

In the opinion of experts, China's experience on the Moon will be very useful for Mars. "But the much greater distance means (...) that we have to do things more slowly, because the round trip time of the radio signal is important", notes Jonathan McDowell.

"And we need a more sensitive station on Earth because the signals will be much weaker", he underlines, also pointing out the risks of failure during the trip.

A first failure in 2011

In fact, of the forty or so Soviet, American, European, Japanese or Indian missions launched to the Red Planet since 1960, the majority have ended in failure.

In 2011, China had already attempted to conquer Mars with its Yinghuo-1 ("Firefly-1") probe placed in a Russian vessel. But the latter had suffered damage.

"As long as (the new probe) lands safely on the Martian surface and returns the first image, Tianwen-1 will already be a success," said Chen Lan.

Far from boasting, China is being cautious after registering some failures since early 2020, with failed launches and the missed return to Earth of a space capsule.

With AFP

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