Tianwen-2 Executes June 11 Course Corrections for July Asteroid Rendezvous
Updated
Updated · SpaceNews · Jun 16
Tianwen-2 Executes June 11 Course Corrections for July Asteroid Rendezvous
1 articles · Updated · SpaceNews · Jun 16
Summary
Radio tracking data shared June 14 showed a frequency break on June 11, indicating Tianwen-2 made another small trajectory-adjustment burn after its main June 7 maneuver.
Those shifts were far smaller than the June 7 signal change, suggesting fine-tuning with the probe’s ion propulsion system as it lines up a July arrival at near-Earth asteroid Kamoʻoalewa.
Mission planning papers say the rendezvous phase ends once Tianwen-2 closes to within 20 kilometers of the asteroid, opening close-proximity mapping, surveying and sample-site selection.
Tianwen-2, launched May 29, 2025, aims to collect samples using three backup-rich methods before returning them to Earth in late November 2027 and then heading for comet 311P in 2035.
CNSA has not officially updated the mission, but the observed maneuvers match the previously described approach sequence for China’s second Tianwen deep-space mission.
How does Tianwen-2's triple-sampling plan test the tech China needs for its future Moon and Mars ambitions?
Is asteroid Kamoʻoalewa a lost fragment of our Moon or a cleverly disguised rock from the main belt?
Tianwen-2’s 2026 Asteroid Rendezvous: China’s Dual Sample Return Mission to Kamoʻoalewa and Comet 311P/PANSTARRS
Overview
China's Tianwen-2 mission reached a major milestone in June 2026 by performing a crucial engine burn that allowed it to rendezvous with the near-Earth asteroid Kamoʻoalewa. This maneuver marked a significant step, positioning the spacecraft near its target after a long cruise phase during which it was mostly untrackable because China did not release its orbital data. Despite the lack of official updates, amateur radio observers played a key role in confirming the maneuver and tracking Tianwen-2’s status. Their efforts helped verify the spacecraft’s arrival, highlighting the importance of community collaboration in space exploration.