Popular Science shares a postcard of Mars taken up-close and personal by China’s Tianwen-1 probe as it enters orbit around the Red Planet:
The five-ton craft carries an orbiter, a lander, and a 530-pound rover. After entering orbit, it will begin a landing attempt with the aim to place the rover on the surface in the massive impact basin Utopia Planitia. The landing attempt is expected to conclude in May. The rover will explore the geological features of the surface of the planet with radar instruments and other tools, and it’ll use a variety of different cameras to figure out what certain rocks are made of on Mars. That information could reveal details about the Red Planet’s past. Meanwhile, the orbiter will continue to image the surface with medium- and high-resolution cameras and other detectors.
Tianwen-1 departed Earth in July of 2020 and has travelled more than 289 million miles since its launch 202 days ago. It is expected to arrive on the surface of the Red Planet a day after the United Arab Emirates’ Hope mission, which entered Mars orbit Tuesday, and a week before NASA’s Perseverance rover, which is expected to enter orbit on February 18th.
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Images at the link.