China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Wentian space lab goes into orbit

Rocket blasts off and carries craft to nearly 400 km above the ground

- By ZHAO LEI in Wenchang, Hainan zhaolei@chinadaily.com.cn

China launched its Wentian space laboratory on Sunday afternoon, sending the country’s largestspa­cecraft into Earth’s orbit to become part of the Tiangong space station.

Encased in a 20.5-meter-long payload, the space lab was carried by a Long March 5B rocket that blasted off at 2:22 pm from a coastal service tower in the Wenchang Space Launch Center in Hainan province.

After a flight of about eight minutes, the rocket placed the craft into a low-Earth orbit nearly 400 kilometers above the ground.

After about 13 hours, Wentian was scheduled to rendezvous and then dock with the Tiangong station’s Tianhe core module, according to the China Manned Space Agency.

The Shenzhou XIV mission crew now flying with the Tiangong — mission commander Senior Colonel Chen Dong, Senior Colonel Liu Yang and Senior Colonel Cai Xuzhe — will then enter the lab module to check its condition and internal equipment, it said.

In the coming weeks, Wentian will be reposition­ed by a robot apparatus from the forward docking port to a lateral port, where it will remain and be prepared for long-term operations, mission planners said.

To prepare for Wentian’s arrival, the Tianzhou 3 cargo spacecraft departed from the Tiangong station on July 17 to leave its docking hatch for the lab. The cargo ship, which was launched in September and had remained connected to Tiangong since then, will be guided by ground controller­s to eventually fall back to Earth.

Before Wentian’s docking, Tiangong consisted of the Tianhe module, the Tianzhou 4 cargo ship and the Shenzhou XIV spacecraft.

Assembled at a manufactur­ing and testing complex in the northern municipali­ty of Tianjin, Wentian was transporte­d by ship and arrived in Wenchang in late April. It underwent function and prelaunch checks over the past three months at the launch center.

Platform for science

The first lab component of the Tiangong station, Wentian features cutting-edge technologi­es, strong capabiliti­es, sophistica­ted design and represents a new milestone in China’s space industry. It incorporat­es the wisdom, dedication and hard work of numerous scientists, engineers and technician­s, according to the China Academy of Space

Technology, which was responsibl­e for designing and making the craft.

The vehicle consists of three major parts — a crew working compartmen­t, an airlock cabin and an unpressuri­zed service module.

Weighing 23 metric tons, the space lab is 17.9 meters tall, roughly equivalent to a six-story residentia­l building, and has a diameter of 4.2 meters. It is the largest and heaviest spacecraft China has ever built and also the world’s heaviest self-propelled spaceship in service, said Zhang Qiao, head designer of Wentian’s overall structure.

The flexible solar panels of the lab are the largest of their kind in China. When fully unfolded, they are more than 55 meters long and have a combined area of nearly 280 square meters.

After Wentian is connected to the Tianhe module, its airlock cabin will replace the one on Tianhe to become the main place for astronauts to put on their spacewalk suits and move out of the space station.

“Its inner space is bigger than that of the airlock cabin on the core module while its hatch is wider, making it easier for astronauts to make preparatio­ns and carry out spacewalks,” Zhang said.

Inside the gigantic lab, there are eight scientific cabinets. They will mainly be used for biological and life science studies and can support research on the growth, aging and genetic traits of plants, animals and microbes in the environmen­t of space, he said.

Outside the airlock cabin, there are 22 extravehic­ular payload adapters capable of carrying scientific equipment needed for experiment­s that require exposure to the space environmen­t, cosmic rays, vacuum and solar winds, Zhang added.

“In addition to its scientific functions, Wentian also serves as a backup control station to the Tianhe core module in case of emergencie­s or malfunctio­ns. It has all the same flight-control devices as those inside the core module to operate the entire Tiangong station,” Zhang said.

The designer added that the craft also has three separate sleeping quarters and an independen­t section for personal hygiene. They can be used in emergencie­s or handovers by two crews.

Wentian also has a five-meter robotic arm that can be used to move small and medium-sized equipment. It can be linked with the 10-meter robotic arm on the Tianhe module to create a joint arm capable of reaching all major parts of the Tiangong station, according to the designer.

Engineerin­g marvel

Pang Zhihao, an observer of manned spacefligh­ts, said the Wentian program is one of the most challengin­g and sophistica­ted space programs China has embarked on.

“You can imagine just how difficult it must have been to design, manufactur­e and deploy such a massive, advanced space lab,” he said.

“Now that it has been successful­ly launched, new challenges are emerging in terms of its flight control, trajectory maneuvers and docking. Both Wentian and Tianhe are big and heavy while there are astronauts inside the Tianhe. We have no prior experience of connecting two spacecraft of this size.”

Wang Yanan, editor-in-chief of Aerospace Knowledge magazine, called the space lab a “marvel of modern engineerin­g and technology”. He said that once scientific equipment inside Wentian begins to operate, the equipment will become valuable assets for scientists around the world by making many new science ideas possible and fostering internatio­nal cooperatio­n.

Mission planners said the Tiangong station’s second lab, Mengtian, will be lifted by a Long March 5B from Wenchang in October.

After it is connected with the Tiangong, the station will form a T-shaped structure and astronauts will have as much as 110 cubic meters of usable space.

After the labs, the Tianzhou 5 cargo craft and the Shenzhou XV crew are scheduled to arrive at the massive orbiting outpost around the end of the year.

Upon its completion, the Tiangong will be manned regularly by groups of three astronauts in periods usually lasting six months. During handovers to a new threeastro­naut group, the station will accommodat­e up to six astronauts.

In the long run, the orbiting outpost will be capable of docking with multiple crewed and cargo ships at the same time and will also be able to link with foreign spacecraft if they have a Chinese-standard docking hatch.

Currently, Tiangong is manned by the Shenzhou XIV mission crew, who entered the station late on June 5, several hours after their spacecraft was launched from the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center in northweste­rn China.

The third group of Tiangong occupants, Chen and his teammates are scheduled to stay in the station for six months to monitor the assembly of the colossal station in space.

The flight of the three astronauts has inaugurate­d a 10-year period in which, barring unforeseen circumstan­ces, Chinese astronauts will be in space every day.

 ?? LI GANG / XINHUA ?? A Long March-5B carrier rocket carrying the Wentian lab module blasts off from the Wenchang Spacecraft Launch Site in South China’s Hainan province on Sunday.
LI GANG / XINHUA A Long March-5B carrier rocket carrying the Wentian lab module blasts off from the Wenchang Spacecraft Launch Site in South China’s Hainan province on Sunday.
 ?? YUAN CHEN / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? People snap photos with their smartphone­s as they watch from the beach as the rocket takes off in Wenchang on Sunday.
YUAN CHEN / FOR CHINA DAILY People snap photos with their smartphone­s as they watch from the beach as the rocket takes off in Wenchang on Sunday.

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