Oman Daily Observer

Chinese astronauts arrive at space station for longest mission

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BEIJING: Three astronauts successful­ly docked with China’s new space station on Saturday on what is set to be Beijing’s longest crewed mission to date and the latest landmark in its drive to become a major space power.

The three blasted off shortly after midnight on Friday from the Jiuquan launch centre in northweste­rn China’s Gobi desert, the China Manned Space Agency said, with the team expected to spend six months at the Tiangong space station.

The space agency declared the launch a success and said the crew “were in good shape”.

The Shenzhou-13 vessel carrying the three completed its docking with the radial port of the space station less than seven hours after the launch. The mission, which is expected to last twice as long as a previous 90-day visit, will involve the crew setting up equipment and testing technology for future constructi­on on the Tiangong station.

Mission commander Zhai Zhigang, 55, a former fighter pilot who performed the country’s first spacewalk in 2008, said the team would undertake “more complex” spacewalks than during previous missions.

The crew include military pilot Wang Yaping, 41, who is the first woman to visit the space station after becoming China’s second woman in space in 2013.

The other team member is People’s Liberation Army pilot Ye Guangfu, 41.

Pictures released by the space agency showed the three astronauts waving to wellwisher­s who held up slogans of encouragem­ent at a send-off ceremony before the launch. A previous record-breaking crew — making the first mission to Tiangong — returned to Earth in September after spending three months on the space station.

China’s heavily promoted space programme has already seen the nation land a rover on Mars and send probes to the moon.

Tiangong, meaning “heavenly palace”, is expected to operate for at least 10 years.

Its core module entered orbit earlier this year, with the station expected to be operationa­l by 2022.

The completed station will be similar to the Soviet Mir station that orbited Earth from the 1980s until 2001. The latest mission is set to “expand China’s technologi­cal boundary” and verify the space station system’s capacity for a longer duration of human occupation, Chen Lan, an independen­t space analyst at Gotaikonau­ts, said.

“I don’t think it is very challengin­g, as China’s technologi­es (are) quite mature, though anything in space is always challengin­g’’, Chen said.

SPACE RACE

Saturday’s blast-off came shortly after China launched its first solar exploratio­n satellite into space, equipped with a telescope to observe changes in the Sun.

The Chinese space agency is planning a total of 11 missions to Tiangong through to the end of next year, including at least two more crewed launches that will deliver two lab modules to expand the 70-tonne station. China’s

space ambitions have been fuelled in part by a US ban on its astronauts on the Internatio­nal Space Station, a collaborat­ion among the United States, Russia, Canada, Europe and Japan.

 ?? — Reuters ?? A general view of the Long March-2f Y13 rocket.
— Reuters A general view of the Long March-2f Y13 rocket.

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