Exploring Mars: China creates robotic helicopter for new missions
China's National Space Science Center hopes to further its surveillance and research for future Mars missions with a prototype miniature helicopter after its successful landing on the planet's surface a few months ago, Daily Sabah reports.
The prototype is similar in appearance to the robotic helicopter Ingenuity, developed by NASA for its Perseverance mission this year, according to a photograph posted on the website of the space science agency on Wednesday.
The agency said the helicopter could be a tool for China's follow-up exploration on Mars, but it did not give details.
China landed a Mars rover in May in its first-ever mission to the planet, becoming the second country after the United States to do so.
NASA's most advanced rover, Perseverance, landed on the planet in February. From the NASA rover, Ingenuity made its inaugural flight in April, rising about 3 meters (10 feet) above the surface, in humankind's first successful deployment of a powered aircraft in a world other than Earth.
The challenge for the 1.8 kilograms (4 pounds) Ingenuity is the planet's thin atmosphere, which is just 1% as dense as Earth's. To compensate for the lack of aerodynamic lift, NASA engineers equipped Ingenuity with rotor blades that are larger – 1.2 meters tip to tip – and spin more rapidly than would be needed on Earth for an aircraft of its size.
Like Ingenuity, the Chinese prototype sports two rotor blades, a sensor-and-camera base and four thin legs. But there is no solar panel at the top like Ingenuity, according to the photograph.
Ingenuity has made more than 10 outings since April, covering an overall distance of more than 2 kilometers with a flight time of about 20 minutes in all.
China is planning its first crewed mission to Mars in 2033.