The Jupiter exploration mission was officially underway.
The Aerospace Bureau activated the largest anti-gravity propulsor, which carried the Mars-1 spacecraft into the high atmosphere, slowly turning into a small black dot that vanished from the view on the ground.
Once the anti-gravity propulsor carried the spacecraft into space orbit, it would release the spacecraft to safely return to Earth. The Mars-1 spacecraft, after orbiting Earth three times on its pre-determined trajectory, would glide into the high-power Z-wave satellite-established space shuttle channel, thereby performing space traversal, and reach the outskirts of Jupiter in approximately nine seconds.
The outside world paid close attention to the Jupiter exploration mission, mainly focusing on the space shuttle process of the Mars-1, to see whether it would successfully reach Jupiter.