NASA camera spots China’s Tianwen-1 Mars spacecraft speeding away from Earth

NASA camera spots China’s Tianwen-1 Mars spacecraft speeding away from Earth

Spacecraft or space rock?

Source: Live Science

An observatory affiliated with NASA’s quest to identify potentially hazardous asteroids spotted something equally speedy but not quite as natural: a spacecraft bound for Mars.

That vehicle was China’s Tianwen-1 Mars mission, which launched on July 23 to begin a seven-month journey to the Red Planet. The spacecraft consists of an orbiter, a lander and a rover, all packed together into what China hopes will become its first successful Mars mission.

The views were captured by a program run by NASA’s Planetary Defense Coordination Office, which scans huge swaths of the sky for space rocks in order to gather enough observations for astronomers to map each object’s path in case one may come a little too close for comfort.

The new animation of Tianwen-1 speeding away from Earth came from a facility at Mauna Loa on Hawaii Island that is one of a pair of Hawaiian observatories that make up the Asteroid Terrestrial-impact Last Alert System, or ATLAS. The ATLAS observatories regularly identify new celestial objects, like the comet of the same name that dazzled skywatchers earlier this year before fizzling out.

But in this case, it was no celestial object that streaked across ATLAS’s view. Instead, it was the second in a trio of highly anticipated spacecraft launching to Mars during this summer’s three-week window of orbital alignment. China hopes that the Tianwen-1 mission’s three robotic components send home a bonanza of science data about the Red Planet.

The launch was preceded by that of the United Arab Emirates’ first interplanetary mission on Sunday. NASA’s own Mars contribution, a massive rover called Perseverance that is also carrying a small experimental helicopter called Ingenuity, is currently scheduled to launch next Thursday (July 30).

Source: Live Science

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