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[國際新聞] China launches space mission with first woman astronaut

本帖最後由 peter236 於 2012-6-16 15:24 編輯

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-18458544

By Jonathan Amos Science correspondent, BBC News







China has launched its latest manned space mission - whose crew includes its first female astronaut, Liu Yang.

The Shenzhou-9 capsule rode to orbit atop a Long March rocket from the Jiuquan spaceport on the edge of the Gobi desert.

Ms Liu and her two male colleagues are heading to the Tiangong space lab.

They will spend over a week living and working on the 335km-high vessel, testing new systems and conducting a number of scientific experiments.

Before leaving, the crew were presented to Communist Party officials, VIPs and the media.

Wearing their flight suits and sitting behind glass, they waved and smiled.

"We will obey orders, listen to directions and be calm; and co-ordinate together to successfully complete China's first manned rendezvous and docking mission," said Commander Jing Haipeng.

China's top legislator, Wu Bangguo, wished them well and told them: "We are expecting your safe return."

The Shenzhou-9 spacecraft lifted off on schedule at 18:37 local time (10:37 GMT; 11:37 BST).

All systems appeared to function normally and eight minutes later, the spacecraft had entered orbit. Very shortly after Shenzhou-9 had unfurled its solar panels.

It will take a couple of days to reach Tiangong. A docking is planned for Monday at 15:00 Beijing time (07:00 GMT; 08:00 BST).

Mr Jing, 46, is making his second spaceflight after participating in the Shenzhou-7 outing in 2008 - the mission that included China's first spacewalk.

His flight engineers are both first-timers, however.

Liu Wang, 42, a People's Liberation Army fighter pilot, has got his chance after spending 14 years in the China National Space Administration's astronaut corps.

Thirty-three-year-old Liu Yang, also a fighter pilot, has on the other hand emerged as China's first woman astronaut after just two years of training.

Her role in the mission will be to run the medical experiments in orbit.

Shenzhou-9 follows on from the unmanned Shenzhou-8 venture last year that tested the technologies required to join a capsule to the Tiangong lab.

Those manoeuvres went well and gave Chinese officials the confidence to send up humans.

When it arrives at Tiangong, the Shenzhou-9 craft is expected to make a fully automated docking, but there is a plan to try a manual docking later in the mission.

This would see the crew uncouple their vehicle from the lab, retreat to a defined distance and then command their ship to re-attach itself.

Liu Wang will take the lead in this activity. "We've done many simulations," he said during the pre-launch press conference.

"We've mastered the techniques and skills. China has first class technologies and astronauts, and therefore I'm confident we will fulfil the manual rendezvous."

Tiangong is the next step in a strategy that Beijing authorities hope will lead ultimately to the construction and operation of a large, permanently manned space station.

It is merely the prototype for the modules China expects to build and join in orbit. Mastering the rendezvous and docking procedures is central to this strategy.
Patriotic pride

At about 60 tonnes in mass, this proposed station would be considerably smaller than the 400-tonne international platform operated by the US, Russia, Europe, Canada and Japan, but its mere presence in the sky would nonetheless represent a remarkable achievement.

Concept drawings describe a core module weighing some 20-22 tonnes, flanked by two slightly smaller laboratory vessels.

Officials say it would be supplied by freighters in exactly the same way that robotic cargo ships keep the International Space Station (ISS) today stocked with fuel, food, water, air, and spare parts.

China is investing billions of dollars in its space programme. It has a strong space science effort under way, with two orbiting satellites having already been launched to the Moon. A third mission is expected to put a rover on the lunar surface.

The Asian country is also deploying its own satellite-navigation system known as BeiDou, or Compass.

Before leaving Earth, Liu Yang said the Shenzhou-9 mission would generate further pride in Chinese people. "When I was a pilot I flew in the sky; now as an astronaut, I'm going into space. It's higher and it's farther," she said.

"I have a lot of tasks to fulfil, but besides these tasks I want to feel the unique environment in space and admire the views. I want to explore a beautiful Earth, a beautiful home.

"I want to record all my feelings and my work, to share with my friends, and my comrades and my future colleagues."

先安內,後攘外; 攪掂咗啲自身問題先擴張國力都未遲。
fibbi 發表於 2012-6-20 09:35


Many things need to be done in parallel. If you wait another 20 yrs before space exploration, all the other big bully western countries will already be mining for minerals on the moon.

They are already talking about mining on the moon or capturing flying asteroids for mineral deposits. If you sit there and wait again, other countries will get an early start on you.

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本帖最後由 peter236 於 2012-6-20 14:02 編輯
回復  peter236


    We are talking about BASIC needs here. Education? Medical? Those are far from  ...
fibbi 發表於 2012-6-20 12:27


You need money to pay for education and medicare. To make more money you need to develop the economy. So you need natural resources to develop the economy.
Aerospace technology has many money-making applications, like GPS system, weather satellite and communication satellite.

Now is the time to develop important aerospace technology, so that the western countries will not be able to monopolize the moon. If you sit there and wait, the western countries will take all the resources.

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本帖最後由 peter236 於 2012-6-20 19:37 編輯
好! 讚!

月球有資源, 運番嚟條數有排計.

話時話, 釣魚島, 黃岩島附近... 咁近既豐富資源, 又唔見佢派 ...
satil 發表於 2012-6-20 18:55


Hundreds of billions have been invested into education and healthcare.
All these things need money and aerospace technology contributes to a booming economy. This is just a simple logic.

In case you overlooked, China is doing exactly what you suggested, i.e. deep sea oil drilling.

CNOON 981 advanced deep sea drilling platform. This is something Vietnam or the Philippines do not have.



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本帖最後由 peter236 於 2012-6-21 12:11 編輯
講得好,講得妙:

有個國家極其富有,有錢人佔全世界十之八九,居然冇全民醫療,有六千萬人冇任何
醫保,同大陸一樣,要「病向錢中醫」,冇錢過主。

但又好其怪,有好多猛人見唔到,時運高?

smurf 發表於 2012-6-21 08:35


Of course the bashers will not admit 50 million Americans are without healthcare coverage, and 45 million on food stamps

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本帖最後由 peter236 於 2012-6-21 15:47 編輯
回復  peter236

Dude, US is a capitalist country.  You make money you stay alive.  China right now is ruled by a self proclaimed communist party.  In a real communist society, no one should be left without health care, food, or any basic services.
blue20ae 發表於 2012-6-21 14:43


Dude, the US is a developed western democracy, which is supposed to be perfect and every citizen should be prosperous and have enough food and medicare.

We all know China is not really Communist any more, and it is in the process of rapidly developing its economy.

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That's communism, not under capitalism.
blue20ae 發表於 2012-6-21 15:50

But the US is a democracy, which is supposed to be perfect and provides for everything, instead they are in debt.

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