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The UAE’s Hope Probe will be the first to reach the Red Planet, followed by China’s Tianwen-1 dual orbiter-rover on February 10, while NASA’s Perseverance rover will make a landing attempt in an area on Mars on February 18.
All three Mars missions were launched in July last year and Hope Probe has so far travelled over 426 million kms after lift off from Japan’s Tanegashima Space Centre at 1.58am (UAE time) on July 20.
Back in July last year, hours before Hope Probe launch, Dr Ahmad Belhoul Al Falasi, then chairman of the UAE Space Agency, shared his insight with Gulf News regarding the three-way race to Mars. He said: “To me it’s not really a race — we are all serving humanity. But it’s also like a friendly competition and it’s good to compete with others, with the UAE as the only Arab country going to space.”
Mars data for free sharing
China’s Tianwen-1 spacecraft, meanwhile, will first orbit Mars before sending a lander containing a rover on its surface in May. If it succeeds, China will become the third country to land a rover on Mars.
The US Perseverance rover, nicknamed Percy, will become the 11th Mars probe sent by Nasa. The six-wheel rover, accompanied by a small camera-equipped helicopter called Ingenuity, is aiming for Jezero crater, a spot that scientists believe was once a lake. Perseverance rover will perform the most extensive search for past life on Mars to date.
Mars orbit insertion
The most challenging part now for Hope Probe is its Mars orbit insertion (MOI). Emirates Mars Mission (EMM) project manager Omran Sharaf earlier made an assurance that Hope Probe is on course for its orbital insertion. He added: “Accuracy is the key to success. If Hope Probe goes too fast or too slow, it will crash on Mars or miss its orbit entirely. As it approaches Mars’ orbit, Hope Probe will do a 30-minute fuel burn using its thrusters and reduce its speed from 121,000kph to 18,000kph.”
From the UAE to Mars and beyond
His Highness Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Vice-President and Prime Minister of the UAE and Ruler of Dubai, announced in September last year an Emirati-made rover that would land on the surface of the moon by 2024. The rover was named “Rashid”, after the late Sheikh Rashid bin Saeed Al Maktoum, the builder of modern Dubai and one of the UAE’s Founding Fathers.
Going to the Moon in 2024 will pave the way to accomplish the UAE’s mission of sending humans to Mars by 2117, according to Adnan AlRais. Rashid will explore the Moon’s surface that has not been studied by previous lunar missions and will boost the UAE’s capacity in space missions.
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Original news source Credit: gulfnews.com
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