The Sentinel-Record

China sends first woman into space

- NG HAN GUAN

JIUQUAN, China — China launched its most ambitious space mission yet on Saturday, carrying its first female astronaut and two male colleagues in an attempt to dock with an orbiting module and work on board for more than a week.

The Shenzhou 9 capsule lifted off as scheduled at 6: 37 p. m. ( 1037 GMT) from the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center on the edge of the Gobi Desert. All systems functioned normally and, just over 10 minutes later, it opened its solar panels and entered orbit.

The launch was declared a success by space program chief Chang Wanquan, a People’s Liberation Army general who sits on the ruling Communist Party’s powerful central military commission — underscori­ng the program’s close military ties.

Female astronaut Liu Yang, 33, and two male crew members — mission commander and veteran astronaut Jing Haipeng, 45, and newcomer Liu Wang, 43 — are to dock the spacecraft with a prototype space lab launched last year in a key step toward building a permanent space station. All three are experience­d pilots and officers in the Chinese air force.

Two of the astronauts will live and work inside the module to test its life- support systems while the third will remain in the capsule to deal with any unexpected emergencie­s.

China is hoping to join the United States and Russia as the only countries to send independen­tly maintained space stations into orbit. It is already one of just three nations to have launched manned spacecraft on their own.

Another manned mission to the module is planned later this year, while possible future missions could include sending a man to the moon.

The space program is a source of enormous national pride for China, reflecting its rapid economic and technologi­cal progress and ambition to rank among the world’s leading nations. The selection of the first female astronaut is giving the program an additional publicity boost.

On a state visit in Denmark, President Hu Jintao congratula­ted everyone connected with the mission.

“I urge you to carry forward the spirit ... and make new contributi­ons to advance the developmen­t of our country’s manned space mission,” Hu said in a statement read to technician­s at Jiuquan.

The astronauts are expected to reach the module, called Tiangong 1, on Monday. Now orbiting at 343 kilometers ( 213 miles) above Earth, the module is only a prototype, and plans call for it to be replaced by a larger permanent space station due for completion around 2020.

That station is to weigh about 60 tons, slightly smaller than NASA’s Skylab of the 1970s and about one- sixth the size of the 16- nation Internatio­nal Space Station.

China has only limited cooperatio­n in space with other nations and its exclusion from the ISS, largely on objections from the United States, was one of the key spurs for it to pursue an independen­t space program 20 years ago.

 ??  ?? LAUNCH: Shenzhou 9 spacecraft rocket launches Saturday from the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center in Jiuquan, China. China sent its first woman and two other astronauts into space to work on a temporary space station for about a week, in a key step...
LAUNCH: Shenzhou 9 spacecraft rocket launches Saturday from the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center in Jiuquan, China. China sent its first woman and two other astronauts into space to work on a temporary space station for about a week, in a key step...

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