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China's Zhurong Mars rover sends back first images

The Zhurong rover, part of the Tianwen-1 mission from China, landed last week and beamed back two images from the Red Planet.
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Less than a week after China became the second country to successfully land a rover on the surface of Mars, its Zhurong rover beamed back its first images Wednesday.

Image: An image taken by China's Zhurong rover shows the deployment of the ramp mechanism
An image taken by the front obstacle avoidance camera of China's Zhurong rover shows the deployment of its ramp mechanism after the rover landed on Mars on Saturday.China National Space Administration / via AFP - Getty Images

The two pictures, one a monochrome image from a fisheye lens and another in color showing a zoomed-in view of Zhurong's array of solar panels, are the first pictures of Mars from China's Tianwen-1 mission.

Image: An image taken by China's Zhurong rover shows the rover's solar panels and antenna
An image taken by the navigation camera of China's Zhurong rover shows the rover's solar panels and antenna after it landed on Mars on Saturday .China National Space Administration / via AFP - Getty Images

Referring to the China National Space Administration, NASA Administrator Bill Nelson, a former U.S. senator, tweeted: "Congratulations to CNSA on the first images from the Zhurong Mars rover!

"As the international scientific community of robotic explorers on Mars grows, the US and the world looks forward to the discoveries Zhurong will make to advance humanity's knowledge of the Red Planet," Nelson said.

The Tianwen-1 mission, which launched in July, arrived at Mars in February. It orbited the planet for months before it sent its lander down last week.

Planitia Utopia, Zhurong's landing site, is a vast, icy plain that was also the destination in 1976 of America's Viking 2 lander, which was stationary.

Zhurong is about midway between Viking 2 and Perseverance, according to a map published by Nature.

In early March, NASA drove Perseverance, its newest Mars rover, off its landing craft and onto the Martian surface.

Since then, Perseverance has sent up its Ingenuity craft, a tiny experimental helicopter, in several controlled flights.