The Guardian Australia

Astronauts at China’s new space station conduct first spacewalk

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Chinese astronauts have performed the country’s first tandem spacewalk, working for seven hours on the outside of the new Tiangong station in orbit around Earth.

Tiangong’s constructi­on is a significan­t step in China’s ambitious space programme. China has previously landed a rover on Mars and sent probes to the moon.

Last month, three astronauts blasted off to become the first crew of the station, where they will remain for three months in China’s longest crewed mission to date. On Sunday morning, two of them left the station for about seven hours of work in the first spacewalk at Tiangong, the China Manned Space Agency said.

“The safe return of astronauts Liu Boming and Tang Hongbo to the Tianhe core module marks the complete success of the first spacewalk in our country’s space station constructi­on,” the agency said.

Their tasks included elevating a panoramic camera outside the Tianhe core module and testing the station’s robotic arm, which will be used to transfer future modules around the station, state media said. The astronauts installed foot stops on the robotic arm and, with its support, carried out other assembly work, the space agency added.

In a video clip of Liu leaving the cabin, he exclaimed: “Wow, it’s too beautiful out here.”

Liu and Tang were shown opening a hatch and exiting the module separately, wearing newly developed suits said to weigh 130kg (20st). They were supported from inside the station by the mission commander, Nie Haisheng, a decorated air force pilot who is on his third space mission.

This was the first of two spacewalks planned for the mission, both expected to last six or seven hours. It was the first time since 2008 that Chinese astronauts have gone outside their spacecraft. Back then, Zhai Zhigang made China the third country to complete a spacewalk after the Soviet Union and the US.

This is China’s first crewed mission in nearly five years, and a matter of huge prestige as the country marks the 100th anniversar­y of the ruling Communist party this month with a massive propaganda campaign. To prepare, the crew underwent more than 6,000 hours of training.

The Chinese space agency is planning a total of 11 launches through to the end of next year, including three more crewed missions. They will deliver two lab modules to expand the station, along with supplies and astronauts.

On Sunday, state television showed footage of the astronauts’ daily lives on Tiangong, including setting up an exercise bike and working out on a treadmill. One crew member was shown eating with chopsticks; another did a handstand and somersault after mealtime.

The mission has attracted a flurry of discussion online, with a hashtag about the spacewalk garnering 200m views on China’s Twitter-like platform Weibo. One user wrote: “How much I’m moved by each step of achievemen­t is beyond words.”

President Xi Jinping has said the constructi­on of China’s first space station is opening “new horizons” in humanity’s attempts to explore the cosmos.

China’s ambition to build an orbiting outpost of its own was fuelled in part by a US ban on Chinese astronauts on the Internatio­nal Space Station, a collaborat­ion between the US, Russia, Canada, Europe and Japan.

The ISS is due for retirement after 2024, although Nasa has said it could remain functional beyond 2028.

Tiangong is expected to have a lifespan of at least 10 years, and China has said it would be open to internatio­nal collaborat­ion on the station.

 ?? Photograph: Xinhua/Rex/Shuttersto­ck ?? A screen image taken at Beijing Aerospace Control Centre of one of the astronauts leaving the space station’s core module, Tianhe.
Photograph: Xinhua/Rex/Shuttersto­ck A screen image taken at Beijing Aerospace Control Centre of one of the astronauts leaving the space station’s core module, Tianhe.
 ?? Photograph: Xinhua/Rex/ Shuttersto­ck ?? A screen image of one of the astronauts on the spacewalk.
Photograph: Xinhua/Rex/ Shuttersto­ck A screen image of one of the astronauts on the spacewalk.

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