Thursday, June 28, 2012

Chinese space crew making homeward journey

Three Chinese astronauts have undocked their spacecraft from an orbiting robotic module and are preparing to return to Earth on Thursday night.

China's Shenzhou 9 vehicle separated from the Tiangong 1 space lab Wednesday evening, according to China's state-run Xinhua news agency. The mission's three taikonauts, as Chinese astronauts are known, returned to Shenzhou 9 to begin the maneuver at 6 p.m. ET (6 a.m. Thursday Beijing time).

  1. More space news from msnbc.com

    1. When the aliens call, who'll answer?

      Science editor Alan Boyle's blog: A new poll suggests Americans would prefer to have Barack Obama rather than Mitt Romney in charge if extraterrestrials attack. Which raises a serious question: Who's really supposed to be in charge of responding to alien signals?

    2. New method probes alien world's atmosphere
    3. Twisters as big as US whip around sun
    4. Scientists count down to a black hole show

The spacefliers are expected to land around 10 p.m. ET Thursday (10 a.m. Friday Beijing time), Xinhua reported. Their touchdown, in northern China's Inner Mongolia autonomous region, will wrap up a historic mission that marked a big step forward in China's ambitious space plans.

"Chinese astronauts have their own home in space now," Shenzhou 9 commander Jing Haipeng told Chinese President Hu Jintao during a congratulatory space call on Tuesday, according to Xinhua. "We are proud of our country!" [Photos of Shenzhou 9 Mission ]

Shenzhou 9 launched on June 16 carrying three astronauts, including 33-year-old Liu Yang, the nation's first woman in space. The mission aimed to pull off China's first-ever manned space docking, and it succeeded ? twice. The vessel hooked up with Tiangong 1 via remote control on June 18, and then again June 24 with the taikonauts at the wheel.

China thus became just the third country to performed a manned docking in orbit. The United States and Russia first accomplished the feat in 1966 and 1969, respectively.

Shenzhou 9's flight is testing technology and techniques needed to build a permanently staffed space station in Earth orbit. Chinense officials have said the nation hopes to have a 60-ton station up and running by 2020.

For comparison, the $100 billion International Space Station weighs about 430 tons. The huge orbiting lab is run by a consortium of more than a dozen countries, but China is not among them.

China's space dreams don't end in low-Earth orbit. The nation has said it wants to return lunar samples to Earth with a robotic spacecraft by 2016 or so, and it plans to put a taikonaut on the moon sometime after the space station is built.

In addition to Liu and Jing, Shenzhou 9's crew includes Liu Wang, 42, who steered Shenzhou 9 away from Tiangong 1 Wednesday evening. Jing, 46, also flew on China's last manned spaceflight, the Shenzhou 7 mission in 2008.

Shenzhou 9 is China's fourth manned space mission, with the other three flights coming in 2003, 2005 and 2008. The nation plans to launch another crew to Tiangong 1 soon, perhaps by the end of the year.

Tiangong 1 has been circling Earth since September 2011, and in November it linked up with the robotic Shenzhou 8 vessel, achieving China's first unmanned space docking.

Follow Space.com senior writer Mike Wall on Twitter @michaeldwall or Space.com @Spacedotcom. We're also on Facebook and Google+.

? 2012 Space.com. All rights reserved. More from Space.com.

the stand josh mcdaniels cotton bowl wizards of waverly place cedric benson playoff schedule charles addams

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.