China's Tianwen-2 probe has successfully arrived at a distance of 20 kilometres from the asteroid 2016HO3, enabling it to begin scientific exploration after an approximately 400-day journey of about one billion kilometres, the China National Space Administration (CNSA) announced on Monday.
China launched its first asteroid sample-return mission, Tianwen-2, on May 29, 2025, aiming to achieve multiple goals over a decade-long expedition: collecting samples from the near-Earth asteroid 2016HO3 and exploring the main-belt comet 311P, which is more distant than Mars.
During the approach phase, the probe acquired imagery of the asteroid.
The mission team leveraged optical navigation data gathered during the close approach to refine the asteroid's ephemeris, reducing the positional uncertainty, previously determined solely through ground-based observations, from hundreds of kilometres down to the kilometre scale, according to the CNSA.
On its voyage to the asteroid, the probe executed deep-space maneuvers and trajectory correction operations.
On June 6, 2026, the probe achieved its first detection of the asteroid.
On June 7, at a range of 30,000 kilometres, it entered a coplanar trajectory with the asteroid, while on June 19, it approached the asteroid to within 2,000 kilometres.
Next, the probe will progressively conduct more detailed scientific exploration to acquire data on the asteroid's morphology, material composition and internal structure, laying the groundwork for subsequent sample collection operations, the CNSA said. (Xinhua)
Edited by Tony Sabine
