Chinese astronauts parachute land after mission
By Christopher Bodeen | AP - BEIJING
29th June 2012 10:36 AM
-
The re-entry capsule of China's Shenzhou 9 spacecraft lands safely in Siziwang Banner of north China's Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region on Friday, June 29, 2012.
Chinese space capsule with three astronauts aboard
returned to Earth on Friday from a 13-day mission to an orbiting module that is
a prototype for a future permanent station.
The crew of the Shenzhou 9 parachuted to a landing on the grasslands of the
country's sprawling Inner Mongolia region at about 10 a.m. (0200 GMT). China
declared the mission to the Tiangong 1 module a major stride ahead for the
country's ambitious space program.
The crew included China's first female astronaut, 33-year-old Liu Yang, who was
joined by mission commander and veteran astronaut Jing Haipeng, 45, and crew
mate Liu Wang, 43. All are highly experienced air force pilots.
The mission had included both remote control and piloted dockings with the
module and extensive medical monitoring of the astronauts as part of
preparations for manning a permanent space station.
China's next goals include another manned mission to the module originally
scheduled for later this year but which may be delayed depending on an
evaluation of the Shenzhou 9 mission and the condition of the Tiangong 1. China
has been extremely cautious and methodical in its manned missions, with more than
three years passing since the previous one, and all four have been relatively
problem-free.
Tiangong 1 is due to be retired in a few years and replaced with a permanent
space station around 2020 that will 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 that China was barred from participating in,
largely on objections from the United States. Possible future missions could
include sending a rover to the moon, possibly followed by a manned lunar
mission.
Launched June 16 from the Jiuquan center on the edge of the Gobi desert in
northern China, Shenzhou 9 is the latest success for China's manned space
program that launched its first astronaut, Yang Liwei, into space in 2003,
making China just the third nation after Russia and the U.S. to achieve that
feat. China would also be the third country after the United States and Russia
to send independently maintained space stations into orbit.
Earlier in the week, a spokeswoman said China spent 20 billion yuan ($3.1
billion) on its space program between 1992 and 2005 — a rare admission for a
program with close links to the secretive military. By the time the next
Shenzhou mission is completed, Beijing will have spent an additional 19 billion
yuan ($3 billion), the spokeswoman said.
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