Bangkok Post

Students to live in Lunar Palace for 200 days

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BEIJING: Chinese students will live in a laboratory simulating a lunar-like environmen­t for up to 200 days as Beijing prepares for its long-term goal of putting humans on the moon.

Four postgradua­te students from the capital’s astronauti­cs research university Beihang entered the 160sq m cabin — dubbed the “Yuegong-1”, or “Lunar Palace” — the official Xinhua news agency reported.

The volunteers will live in the sealed lab to simulate a long-term, self-contained space mission with no input from the outside world, Xinhua said.

Human waste will be treated with a bioferment­ation process and experiment­al crops and vegetables grown with the help of food and waste byproducts.

The cabin represents the “world’s most advanced closed-loop life-support technology so far”, state broadcaste­r CCTV said.

China does not expect to land its first astronauts on the moon for at least another decade, but the project seeks to help the country prepare lunar explorers for longer stays on the surface.

Two men and two women entered the lab for an initial stay of 60 days. They will then be relieved by another group of four, who will stay for 200 days, before returning for an additional 105.

The “Lunar Palace” has two plant cultivatio­n modules and a living cabin: 42 sq m containing four bed cubicles, a common room, a bathroom, a waste-treatment room and a room for raising animals.

“I will be in charge of the treatment of solid waste, urine, shredding straw, threshing wheat, processing food and other work,” one of the student volunteers told CCTV, adding that other team members would have tasks related to crop growing, health monitoring, and supply inventory.

A successful 105-day trial was conducted in 2014.

The Lunar Palace is the world’s third bioregener­ative life-support base, and the first developed in China.

It is the only such facility to involve animals and microorgan­isms as well as plants and humans, its chief designer Liu Hong told CCTV, calling it “the first of its kind”.

China is pouring billions of dollars into its space programme and working to catch up with the US and Europe, with hopes to have a crewed outpost by 2022.

Beijing sees the programme as symbolisin­g the country’s progress and a marker of its rising global stature. Last month, China’s first cargo spacecraft, Tianzhou-1, successful­ly docked with an orbiting space lab.

 ?? AFP ?? Student volunteers are seen inside the Lunar Palace 1, a laboratory in Beijing simulating a Moon-like environmen­t.
AFP Student volunteers are seen inside the Lunar Palace 1, a laboratory in Beijing simulating a Moon-like environmen­t.

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