China's first Mars probe will be launched between Nov 8 and Nov 20, after being delayed for two years, a top scientist said.
            
            
                       BEIJING - China's first Mars probe will be launched between Nov 8  and Nov 20, after being delayed for two years, a top scientist said.       
         Yinghuo-1, a micro-satellite weighing 110 kilograms, will be  sent into space with Russia's Phobos-Grunt mission at the Baikonur  Cosmodrome launch site in Kazakhstan.         
           The probe is expected to enter a preset orbit around Mars  between August and September next year, said Wu Ji, director of the  National Space Science Center under the Chinese Academy of Sciences.           
             China News Service, citing the Russian Federal Space Agency, said the launch will be on Nov 9.             
               Experts said the project is expected to lead China further  into deep space exploration, following two successful lunar probe  projects since 2007.               
                 Wu, who has designed scientific goals for the project  with his colleagues, said Yinghuo-1 has been safely transported to the  launch site, and a check showed everything is fine.                 
                   The mini-satellite's scientific goals include  exploring Mars' space environment, and relaying back the first images of  Mars taken by a Chinese satellite.                   
                     "Human beings now have only limited knowledge of Mars' upper atmosphere," he explained.                     
                       On board the probe are a magnetometer to explore  Mars' magnetic field, a device to explore its upper atmosphere, and two  cameras to take photos of the Red Planet for studying dust storms and  their impact on the upper atmosphere, he said.                       
                         Russia's Phobos-Grunt mission will land on the  Martian moon Phobos, collect geological samples and return them to Earth  in three years.                         
                           The mission was set for October 2009, but  later postponed to this year to enhance the reliability of the project.  Russian space officials explained in 2009 that scientists needed more  time to study Phobos' surface and design better facilities to collect  soil samples from Phobos.                           
                             Earlier reports said Yinghuo-1 will travel  350 million kilometers in 11 months before separating from the Russian  landing craft to enter the planet's orbit. It is expected to circle  around the planet for one year.                             
                               Pang Zhihao, deputy editor-in-chief of the  monthly Space International, said that it is difficult to maneuver the  satellite into orbit.                               
                                 "If the timing of the maneuvers are not  right, or the probe's speed is too fast or too slow, the satellite could  possibly fail to be captured by the planet and miss the orbit," he  said, adding maneuvering a Mars probe that far is extremely demanding.                                 
                                   Only the European Space Agency has  succeeded in sending a probe into orbit around Mars in one shot. Mars  probe projects by the United States and Japan have all encountered  failures, he said.                                   
                                     Without a deep space network to  monitor and control interplanetary spacecraft, China relies on Russian  facilities for its first Mars probe project, he said.                                     
                                       China is expected to complete a  deep space network by 2016, including two domestic monitor and tracking  stations and a third in South America, Qian Weiping, a top scientist in  the field, said earlier.                                       
                                         "With the network ready and a  powerful launch vehicle, China will conduct its next Mars exploration in  the future on our own," said Wu Ji, adding the academy has started to  research scientific goals and devices on board for the future Mars  explorations.                                         
                                           Topics of interest to  scientists across the world include whether there was once life on Mars  and how its atmosphere took shape.