Khaleej Times

Earth-bound spacelab to offer ‘splendid’ show

- AFP

beijing — An out-of-control space laboratory that will plunge back to Earth in the coming days is unlikely to cause any damage, Chinese authoritie­s say, but will offer instead a “splendid” show akin to a meteor shower.

China’s space agency said on Thursday that the nearly eight-tonne Tiangong-1 will re-enter the atmosphere some time between Saturday and Monday. The European Space Agency has a smaller window between midday Saturday and early Sunday afternoon GMT time.

But there is “no need for people to worry”, the China Manned Space Engineerin­g Office (CMSEO) said on its WeChat social media account.

Such falling spacecraft do “not crash into the Earth fiercely like in sci-fi movies, but turn into a splendid (meteor shower) and move across the beautiful starry sky as they race towards the Earth”, it said.

The lab was placed in orbit in September 2011 and had been slated for a controlled re-entry, but it ceased functionin­g in March 2016 and space enthusiast­s have been bracing for its fiery return.

Beijing sees its multi-billion-dollar space programme as a symbol of the country’s rise. It plans to send a manned mission to the moon in the future.

China sent another lab into orbit, the Tiangong-2, in September 2016 and hopes to turn it into a crewed space station by 2022.

Experts have downplayed any concerns about the Tiangong-1 causing any damage when it hurtles back to Earth, with the ESA noting that nearly 6,000 uncontroll­ed re-entries of large objects have occurred over the past 60 years without harming anyone.

The CMSEO said the probabilit­y of someone being hit by a meteorite of more than 200 grammes is one in 700 million. —

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