Shanghai Daily

Space station capsule to take off by 2020

- (Xinhua)

CHINA is accelerati­ng its timetable for a space station, with the core capsule expected to be launched in 2020, says Yang Liwei, director of the China Manned Space Engineerin­g Office and the country’s first astronaut.

Yang told Chinese media recently that the two experiment modules of the space station will be sent into space in 2021 and 2022. Three or four manned missions and several cargo spacecraft are planned in 2021 and 2022.

After constructi­on of the main parts of the space station, a capsule holding a large optical telescope will be sent into the same orbit to fly with the station, Yang said.

During constructi­on of the station, the number of manned space missions will rise to about five a year, compared with once every two or three years when China began sending astronauts into space more than a decade ago. Astronaut recruitmen­t will be expanded.

Born in Suizhong County of Huludao City, northeast China’s Liaoning Province, in 1965, Yang has the rank of major general. He became China’s first astronaut when he went into space aboard the Shenzhou-5 craft on October 15, 2003.

“Every second of that day was totally new to me. Nothing can surpass that stunning memory,” Yang recalled.

China drew up a manned space flight plan code-named Dawn Project in the 1970s, but lacked the economic and technologi­cal conditions to implement it.

In 1986, the State Council listed space technology in a high-tech developmen­t plan. In 1992, China launched its manned space flight program.

The success of Shenzhou-5 made China the third country to acquire manned space travel technology on its own.

China gained space transport technologi­es through the Shenzhou-5 and Shenzhou-6 spacecraft, and extra-vehicular space walk technologi­es through the Shenzhou-7 mission.

The Shenzhou-8 and Shenzhou-9 missions helped China master autonomous and manned rendezvous and docking technologi­es. China’s manned space flight technologi­es have matured since the Shenzhou-10 mission. From Shenzhou-5 to Shenzhou11, China has sent 11 astronauts into space.

Yang said he could only eat prepared food like mooncake when he was aboard Shenzhou-5. But when Shenzhou-11 carried Jing Haipeng and Chen Dong to China’s first space lab Tiangong-2 in 2016, the two astronauts chose more than 100 kinds of food for their one-month stay.

Yang likened Shenzhou-5 to a tractor and Shenzhou-11 to a limousine.

“When Shenzhou-5 was orbiting the Earth in 2003, I could communicat­e with the ground controller­s only 15 percent of the time. When Jing and Chen were in space in 2016 they could communicat­e with the ground for 85 percent of the flight.

“They could watch news programs, use mobile phones, send messages to the ground and log on to the Internet,” Yang said.

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