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Station’s blazing re-entry

- AP

CHINA’S defunct Tiangong 1 space station mostly burned up on re-entry into the atmosphere over the central South Pacific yesterday, Chinese space authoritie­s said.

The experiment­al space laboratory re-entered about 8.15am, the China Manned Space Engineerin­g Office said.

Scientists monitoring the craft’s disintegra­ting orbit had forecast the craft would mostly burn up and would pose only the slightest of risks to people. Analysis from the Beijing Aerospace Control Center showed it had mostly burned up.

Brad Tucker, an astrophysi­cist at Australian National University, said Tiangong 1’s re-entry was “mostly successful” but would have been better if the craft had not been spinning toward Earth.

“It could have been better obviously, if it wasn’t tumbling, but it landed in the Southern Pacific Ocean and that’s kind of where you hope it would land,” he said.

“It’s been tumbling and spinning for a while, which means that when it really starts to come down it’s less predictabl­e about what happens to it.”

He likened it to an aircraft landing, saying it’s more difficult to predict where a plane that is “shaking around and moving” will land than one that is smoothly descending.

Launched in 2011, Tiangong 1 was China’s first space station, serving as an experiment­al platform for bigger projects, such as the Tiangong 2 launched in September 2016 and a future permanent Chinese space station.

Two crews of Chinese astronauts lived on the station while testing docking procedures and other operations.

Its last crew departed in 2013 and contact with it was cut in 2016.

Since then, it has orbited gradually closer and closer to Earth on its own while being monitored.

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