UAE Mars mission: history made as Hope probe successfully enters orbit


Sarwat Nasir
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The UAE’s Mars probe could not have been better named.

Success or failure were always only secondary to the mission’s greatest achievement. To lift up our heads and show us the universe.

The country made history on Tuesday evening when it joined an elite club of five nations that have sent a spacecraft to the Red Planet.

Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed, Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi and Deputy Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces, and Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid, Vice President and Ruler of Dubai, personally thanked staff from mission control in Dubai.

[You were] part of a generation that makes us proud. You took our honour and our reputation up to Mars

The Crown Prince said the bright young Emiratis who led the mission, including project chief Omran Sharaf, were "part of a generation that makes us proud. You took our honour and our reputation up to Mars".

After seven months in space and six years since its inception, Hope defied a 50 per cent risk of failure to enter the Mars orbit.

And its lonely 493.5 million kilometres journey through space was an incredible one.

It first blasted off from Japan's Tanegashima Island in July, 2020 in the midst of a pandemic, overseen by a skeleton self-isolating crew and with almost no live spectators.

It survived the initial launch, the jettisoning of rockets, course correction manoeuvres and maintained contact with mission control in Dubai.

But on Tuesday evening, Emirati engineers faced a nail-biting wait as it made its final approach.

At 7.30pm, it fired its thrusters and used half of its 800kg of fuel to slam on the brakes and cut its speed from 120,000kph to 18,000kph.

The effect - not that any human saw it - was a spectacular feat of engineering.

As a result of the distance between Earth and Mars, engineers in Dubai waited at least 11 minutes for the message confirming thrusters worked. The six thrusters fired for about 30 minutes in all.

During that time, all contact was lost as scheduled when the probe disappeared behind the Red Planet.

Then came the signal: success.

It could have all gone wrong. Due to the complexity involved and the wild, unforgiving nature of space, many previous missions have been lost at this point - or much earlier.

To date, more than half of Mars missions have failed. The first from early Soviet attempts to China's Yinghuo-1 in 2011, whether on the launch pad, on approach to Mars, at points in between.

Sarah Al Amiri, Chairwoman of the UAE Space Agency and Minister of State for Advanced Sciences, said the project went through setbacks along the way but were overcome.

"I started working on this programme at the end of 2013 and it's been a series of challenges that we've sometimes thought were unsurmountable.

"We had only six years to design and develop it. The budget we had wasn't very high. We went through various times when things broke. We have to fix it in time to get the spacecraft to where we needed it to be.

"What has made this mission remarkable is not only the 200 Emiratis that were working on this, it's the 450 people from different continents, backgrounds and beliefs. This was truly an international endeavour and this is what science needs to be, this is what exploration is all about."

At Burj Park in Dubai, officials and media who gathered to watch the orbit on big screens cheered as the mission was hailed a success.

The world’s tallest building, Burj Khalifa, was lit up throughout the event and displayed the faces of the engineers who worked tirelessly on the mission over the past six years.

A projection of the Hope probe was also shown on its façade, as well as images of the Red Planet.

Science mission begins

Next, the science begins.

The Hope probe mission was not a publicity project.

From the start, the project's engineers and UAE leaders wanted to fill a gap in research and make ground-breaking discoveries about the Red Planet.

Hope is best described as a weather or climate satellite.

It will study how energy moves through the atmosphere throughout the day and throughout the seasons of its 687-day year.

Hope is one of three Mars missions set for this year. China's Tianwen-1 is due to enter Martian orbit on Wednesday. In addition to an orbiter, the spacecraft will set down a lander and rover to explore the surface of the planet.

Nasa's Perseverance rover is also due to land on the surface of Mars this month.

In a message on Twitter, Nasa congratulated the Emirati team on its success and quoted the 10th century Iraqi poet Al Mutanabbi.

"Dear Hope Mars Mission, congratulations on arriving at Mars! In the words of the poet Al Mutanabbi: "If you ventured in pursuit of glory, don’t be satisfied with less than the stars."

Spectacular images

As with all Mars research, scientists want to understand why Mars once had water - and what happened to it.

This involves studying the behaviour of atoms of hydrogen and oxygen at the very top of the atmosphere. It is thought that understanding these could explain the erosion of the Red Planet's atmosphere by the particles that stream away from the Sun.

The probe's capabilities also mean we should see hugely impressive images of the Red Planet soon.

This, it is hoped, will also capture the imagination of young Arabs around the world, and make them proud to be among the stars.

The years Ramadan fell in May

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Important questions to consider

1. Where on the plane does my pet travel?

There are different types of travel available for pets:

  • Manifest cargo
  • Excess luggage in the hold
  • Excess luggage in the cabin

Each option is safe. The feasibility of each option is based on the size and breed of your pet, the airline they are traveling on and country they are travelling to.

 

2. What is the difference between my pet traveling as manifest cargo or as excess luggage?

If traveling as manifest cargo, your pet is traveling in the front hold of the plane and can travel with or without you being on the same plane. The cost of your pets travel is based on volumetric weight, in other words, the size of their travel crate.

If traveling as excess luggage, your pet will be in the rear hold of the plane and must be traveling under the ticket of a human passenger. The cost of your pets travel is based on the actual (combined) weight of your pet in their crate.

 

3. What happens when my pet arrives in the country they are traveling to?

As soon as the flight arrives, your pet will be taken from the plane straight to the airport terminal.

If your pet is traveling as excess luggage, they will taken to the oversized luggage area in the arrival hall. Once you clear passport control, you will be able to collect them at the same time as your normal luggage. As you exit the airport via the ‘something to declare’ customs channel you will be asked to present your pets travel paperwork to the customs official and / or the vet on duty. 

If your pet is traveling as manifest cargo, they will be taken to the Animal Reception Centre. There, their documentation will be reviewed by the staff of the ARC to ensure all is in order. At the same time, relevant customs formalities will be completed by staff based at the arriving airport. 

 

4. How long does the travel paperwork and other travel preparations take?

This depends entirely on the location that your pet is traveling to. Your pet relocation compnay will provide you with an accurate timeline of how long the relevant preparations will take and at what point in the process the various steps must be taken.

In some cases they can get your pet ‘travel ready’ in a few days. In others it can be up to six months or more.

 

5. What vaccinations does my pet need to travel?

Regardless of where your pet is traveling, they will need certain vaccinations. The exact vaccinations they need are entirely dependent on the location they are traveling to. The one vaccination that is mandatory for every country your pet may travel to is a rabies vaccination.

Other vaccinations may also be necessary. These will be advised to you as relevant. In every situation, it is essential to keep your vaccinations current and to not miss a due date, even by one day. To do so could severely hinder your pets travel plans.

Source: Pawsome Pets UAE

UAE squad

Esha Oza (captain), Al Maseera Jahangir, Emily Thomas, Heena Hotchandani, Indhuja Nandakumar, Katie Thompson, Lavanya Keny, Mehak Thakur, Michelle Botha, Rinitha Rajith, Samaira Dharnidharka, Siya Gokhale, Sashikala Silva, Suraksha Kotte, Theertha Satish (wicketkeeper) Udeni Kuruppuarachchige, Vaishnave Mahesh.

UAE tour of Zimbabwe

All matches in Bulawayo
Friday, Sept 26 – First ODI
Sunday, Sept 28 – Second ODI
Tuesday, Sept 30 – Third ODI
Thursday, Oct 2 – Fourth ODI
Sunday, Oct 5 – First T20I
Monday, Oct 6 – Second T20I

What can victims do?

Always use only regulated platforms

Stop all transactions and communication on suspicion

Save all evidence (screenshots, chat logs, transaction IDs)

Report to local authorities

Warn others to prevent further harm

Courtesy: Crystal Intelligence