San Francisco Chronicle

Chinese astronauts will finish building space station

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BEIJING — China launched a rocket Tuesday carrying three astronauts to complete constructi­on of the country’s permanent orbiting space station, during which they will expand the facility to its maximum capacity of six crew aboard.

The crew of the Shenzhou-15 will overlap for several days with the existing 3-member crew of the Tiangong station, who will then return to Earth after their six-month mission.

Their spaceship blasted off atop a Long March-2F carrier rocket from the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center on the edge of the Gobi Desert at 11:08 p.m. Tuesday.

The six-month mission, commanded by Fei Junlong and crewed by Deng Qingming and Zhang Lu, will be the last in the station’s constructi­on phase, according to the China Manned Space Agency.

Fei, 57, is a veteran of the 2005 four-day Shenzhou-6 mission, the second time China sent a human into space. Deng and Zhang are making their first space flights.

The station’s third and final module docked with the station earlier this month, one of the last steps in China’s morethan-decade-long effort to maintain a constant crewed presence in orbit.

After the Shenzhou-15 spaceship makes an automated docking with the Tianhe core living and control module’s front port, the station will be expanded to its maximum size, with three modules and three spacecraft attached for a total mass of nearly 100 tons.

Tiangong has room to accommodat­e six astronauts at a time and the handover will take about a week. That would mark the station’s first in-orbit crew rotation.

Previous missions to the space station have taken about 13 hours from liftoff to docking.

China has not yet said what further work is needed to complete the station.

Next year, it plans to launch the Xuntian space telescope, which, while not part of Tiangong, will orbit in sequence with the station and can dock occasional­ly with it for maintenanc­e.

Without the attached spacecraft, the Chinese station weighs about 66 tons — a fraction of the Internatio­nal Space Station, which launched its first module in 1998 and weighs around 465 tons.

With a lifespan of 10 to 15 years, Tiangong could one day be the only space station still up and running if the Internatio­nal Space Station retires in the coming years as planned.

While China’s crewed space program is officially three decades old this year, it truly got under way in 2003, when China became only the third country after the U.S. and Russia to put a human into space using its own resources.

 ?? Xinhua News Agency ?? Chinese astronauts Fei Junlong, Deng Qingming and Zhang Lu wave before their spaceship blasted off from the Gobi Desert.
Xinhua News Agency Chinese astronauts Fei Junlong, Deng Qingming and Zhang Lu wave before their spaceship blasted off from the Gobi Desert.

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