Mars rover transmits data via European orbiter

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Zhao Lei
Saturday 11 December 2021 12:54 EST
A photo released on June 11 by the China National Space Administration shows Zhurong, China’s first Mars rover, on the surface of the planet
A photo released on June 11 by the China National Space Administration shows Zhurong, China’s first Mars rover, on the surface of the planet (CHINA DAILY)

China’s Zhurong Mars rover and the European Space Agency’s Mars Express orbiter recently performed an in-orbit relay communication test, the China National Space Administration and the ESA announced on 1 December. The test took place on the morning of 21 November and lasted 10 minutes.

Zhurong sent up testing data to the Mars Express that was travelling in a Mars orbit about 4,000 kilometres from the rover. The European satellite then transmitted the data to a European Space Operations Centre ground station via deep-space communication antennas. After receiving the data, the operations centre in Darmstadt, Germany, sent it to the Beijing Aerospace Control Centre in the Chinese capital, where Chinese mission controllers confirmed its data’s accuracy.

“Normally, an orbiter such as ESA’s Mars Express first sends down a hail signal to a rover as a ‘hello’. The rover then sends back a response to establish stable communications and begin the two-way exchange of information. But this relies on the rover’s radio system being compatible with the orbiter’s,” an ESA statement quoted James Godfrey, Mars Express’s spacecraft operations manager, as saying.

As the European orbiter transmits its “hello” signal using different communication frequencies than the Chinese rover receives, two-way communication is not possible. But in the other direction, Zhurong can transmit a signal using a frequency that Mars Express can receive.

The relay radio on Mars Express has a mode that allows one-way “in the blind” communication where the sender can’t be sure if its signal is being received, but the technique hadn’t been tested on the spacecraft, he explained.

In November, the Chinese and European teams carried out a series of experimental communication tests in which Mars Express used this “in the blind” mode to listen for signals sent to it by Zhurong. The test finally succeeded on 21 November.

Named after the Chinese god of fire, Zhurong is the core component of the Tianwen 1 mission, China’s first interplanetary adventure, and is the sixth rover on the Red Planet, following five from the United States. It is tasked with surveying Mars’ landforms, geological structures, soil characteristics, potential locations of water and ice, and atmospheric and environmental characteristics, as well as magnetic, gravitational and other physical fields.

As of 1 December, the rover had worked on Mars for 196 Martian days, had travelled 1,418 yards and obtained about 10 gigabytes of data. It has sufficient energy and is in good condition, the China National Space Administration said.

Previously published on Chinadaily.com.cn

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