The Asian Age

China’s space lab might fall to earth this week

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Beijing, March 27: China’s first experiment­al space lab is expected to fall back to Earth between March 31 and April 4 and should burn up in the atmosphere, space authoritie­s said.

Tiangong- 1 has officially stopped sending data and entered its final phase of life on March 16, a statement issued on Monday by the China Manned Space Engineerin­g Office said.

The Tiangong, or Heavenly Palace, is orbiting at an average height of about 216.2 km, the announceme­nt noted, but did not disclose any reentry location.

It is impossible to name the exact re- entry location at this stage, a Chinese aerospace expert told state- run Global Times.

The approximat­e reentry location cannot be decided until the last two hours before it starts to fall based on internatio­nal precedents, he said.

The lab will likely enter the atmosphere between March 31 and April 4, according to Beijing Aerospace Control Centre and other agency estimates. The China Manned Space website will supply daily updates. Launched in September 2011, Tiangong- 1 an experiment­al had a design life of two years.

The heavenly vehicle successful­ly docked with the Shenzhou- 8, Shenzhou9 and Shenzhou- 10 spacecraft and undertook a series of experiment­s.

The lab completed its main missions following Shenzhou- 10’ s return in June 2013.

During its extended flight, Tiangong- 1 conducted experiment­s in space technology, space- earth remote sensing and space environmen­t exploratio­n, the office said.

China plans to finalise its space station to rival Mir, the Russian space station currently in orbit by 2022.

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 ??  ?? Tiangong- 2, China’s second space laboratory, taking off for launch. — Via web
Tiangong- 2, China’s second space laboratory, taking off for launch. — Via web

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