channelnewsasia.com - China counts down to its riskiest space mission
   
 
  blogs  
 
yournews
   
   
Video Finance Lifestyle Travel Weather Discussion TV Shows
CNA Live    | About Us 
 
  Home ›
 
Asia Pacific News

 
 

China counts down to its riskiest space mission
Posted: 25 September 2008 1336 hrs

 
 
Photos  of

   
 

JIUQUAN, China : China counted down Thursday to its third manned space mission which for the first time will include a space walk -- a feat as risky as it is prestigious for the rising Asian power.

Zhai Zhigang, an airforce colonel who grew up in abject poverty in China's bleak northeast, is expected to carry out the 30-minute space walk Friday or more likely Saturday, according to state media.

The Long March 2F rocket carrying the Shenzhou VII spacecraft is scheduled to blast off from Jiuquan Satellite Launch Centre in northwest China between 9:07pm and 10:27pm (1307 and 1427 GMT) Thursday.

Its mission: a 68-hour journey to space and back, including the walk while in orbit 373 kilometres (230 miles) above Earth.

"We have the confidence, the determination and the ability to take the Chinese people's first steps into space," said one of the three astronauts, Jing Haipeng, referring to the space walk.

Getting comfortable with the art of spacewalking is a crucial next step in China's most immediate extra-terrestrial ambition: to build a permanent space lab.

By 2010 two more unmanned craft will have been sent up, as well as another manned spaceship with a crew of three to start work on the lab, according to the China Daily.

Vice President Xi Jinping -- widely seen as a candidate to become China's next leader when political power changes hands in four year's time -- was due to meet the astronauts two and a half hours before take-off, the China Daily said.

The astronauts, led by 41-year-old Zhai, have trained together for over a decade, but the mission is not without its risks, notably the space walk.

"The process of (space walks) cannot be simulated completely on the ground," said Wang Zhaoyao, spokesman of the manned space mission, according to the China Daily.

"Some of the newly developed products have to be tested in flight for the first time."

One of the astronauts, whom government websites have identified as Zhai, will test a new Chinese-made spacesuit on the space walk.

Coming just a month after the end of the Beijing Olympics, the mission may trigger a new burst of nationalist pride in some segments of the population.

Space enthusiasts have been converging on the city of Jiuquan, in a remote part of Gansu province, hoping to witness for themselves China's next bid for greatness.

A middle school teacher surnamed Chen from the provincial capital, Lanzhou, was part of a group of 200 who would be bused the 280 kilometres to the launch centre to watch Shenzhou -- its name means "Divine Vessel" -- blast off.

"The education department of Gansu has arranged for us to go. We're coming from all around the province. It'll help push forward science and technology education," he said.

China first sent a man into space in 2003, becoming the third nation after the United States and the former Soviet Union to accomplish this feat.

The pioneer astronaut, Yang Liwei, became a national hero and is still featured at major events, acting as one of the torch bearers in the Olympic torch relay ahead of the August Beijing Games.

China's second manned space mission in 2005 sent two men into orbit for 115 hours, with the task of studying living and working conditions in space.

China's manned space programme is characterised by its frugality compared with the US and Soviet programmes in the 1960s, and it does not repeat a test or an experiment that has already proved successful, observers say.

The Shenzhou VII is scheduled to land in the northern Inner Mongolia region after the mission is completed.

- AFP/vm

 

 



Other asiapacific News
Bomb attack kills three at Pakistani checkpoint
Two killed, dozens injured in Indonesian quake
SKorea urged to learn lessons from Berlin Wall's collapse
US, Pakistan negotiate deal on nuke security
Cambodia announces Thaksin visit, aggravating Thai row
Islamic rebels behead Philippine teacher
NKorea's Kim Jong-Il reportedly has six personal trains
Strong earthquake hits Indonesian island
NATO, Afghanistan probe deadly 'friendly' strike
Malaysia Islamic MPs vow divorce if party change
Anti-Taliban mayor among 12 killed in Pakistan suicide bomb
Dalai Lama visits Indian border state despite China protest
Thailand says protecting "dignity" in Cambodia spat
Hundreds join anti-corruption rally in Indonesia

 

 
Affiliate Sites:
 
About Us  |  Contact Us  |  Advertise with Us  |  Terms & Conditions