China unveils first Mars rover and exploration system for red planet
A prototype of a vehicle that could go to the red planet is to go on public display after a Chinese rover put on the moon broke down this year

China's main contractor supplying its space programme has unveiled details of a prototype Mars rover.

The vehicle has been built by the China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation and comes after the failure of China's rover on the moon early this year.
Ouyang Ziyuan, China's chief scientist for lunar missions, told state media earlier this year the nation's first mission to Mars could be launched as early as 2020 and that by 2030 an unmanned spacecraft would return from the planet with samples. The government has yet to set an official timescale for any mission.
The six-wheeled Mars rover looks almost identical to the lunar rover, Yutu or Jade Rabbit, with wing-spreading solar panels, head-mounted cameras and a fixed robotic arm at the front.
But there are some significant design changes to deal with the different environment on Mars.