HomeSpace FlightNASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter confirms that China's Zhurong rover has been stationary...

NASA’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter confirms that China’s Zhurong rover has been stationary for months

This cutout is from three images acquired in 2022 and 2023. The rover is the dark and relatively bluish feature visible in the upper middle of the first (left) image and lower middle of the other two images. This time series shows that the rover has not changed its position between Sept. 8, 2022 and Feb. 7, 2023. (Image credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/UArizona)

On Feb. 10, China’s Tianwen 1 mission — the country’s first interplanetary mission — celebrated its second anniversary in Mars orbit. But one major piece of the mission, the Zhurong rover, seems to have stalled, and there’s now photo evidence of its stationary state.

Zhurong entered a planned hibernation in May 2022 to ride out the dark and cold Martian winter, as the rover relies on solar energy for power and heat. Its controllers at the China National Space Administration (CNSA) anticipated a wake-up in December as the light returned in Martian spring, but the agency has not yet provided any updates about Zhurong. 

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