
Copernical Team
ILLUMA-T launches to the International Space Station

Cosmic Wander Takes Flight: D-Orbit's 12th Mission Elevates Space Industry Standards

Airbus Introduces "Detumbler" Device to Address Satellite Tumbling in Low Earth Orbit

EBAD's NEA Payload Release Modules prove crucial in SpaceX Transporter-9 mission

ICEYE expands SAR satellite constellation with four new satellites

Gemini North peers deeper into the dust with new instrument

AI Chemist creates Mars-compatible oxygen catalyst from meteorites

China develops 'GoMars' Model for enhanced Mars mission planning

UTA developing more powerful rocket engines for space travel

China wants to retrieve a sample of Mars by 2028

China continues to take great strides as part of its goal to become a superpower in space and a direct competitor with NASA. In addition to its proposed expansion of the Tiangong space station and the creation of the International Lunar Research Station (ILRS), China is also planning on sending crewed missions to Mars in the coming decade. In preparation for the arrival of taikonauts on the red planet, China is gearing up to return samples of Martian soil and rock to Earth roughly two years ahead of the proposed NASA-ESA Mars Sample Return (MSR).
This mission will be the third in the China National Space Administration's (CNSA) Tianwen program (Tianwen-3) and will consist of a pair of launches in 2028 that will return samples to Earth in July 2031.