Chinese astronauts board space station in historic mission
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[November 30, 2022]
By Ryan Woo and Liangping Gao
BEIJING (Reuters) -Three Chinese astronauts arrived on Wednesday at
China's space station for the first in-orbit crew rotation in Chinese
space history, launching operation of the second inhabited outpost in
low-Earth orbit after the NASA-led International Space Station.
The spacecraft Shenzhou-15, or "Divine Vessel", and its three passengers
lifted off atop a Long March-2F rocket from the Jiuquan Satellite Launch
Centre at 11:08 p.m. (1508 GMT) on Tuesday in sub-freezing temperatures
in the Gobi Desert in northwest China, according to state television.
Shenzhou-15 was the last of 11 missions, including three previous crewed
missions, needed to assemble the "Celestial Palace", as the multi-module
station is known in Chinese. The first mission was launched in April
2021.
The spacecraft docked with the station more than six hours after the
launch, and the three Shenzhou-15 astronauts were greeted with warm hugs
from the previous Shenzhou crew from whom they were taking over.
The Shenzhou-14 crew, who arrived in early June, will return to Earth
after a one-week handover that will establish the station's ability to
temporarily sustain six astronauts, another record for China's space
programme.
The Shenzhou-15 mission offered the nation a rare moment to celebrate,
at a time of widespread unhappiness over China's zero-COVID policies,
while its economy cools amid uncertainties at home and abroad.
"Long live the motherland!" many Chinese netizens wrote on social media.
The "Celestial Palace" was the culmination of nearly two decades of
Chinese crewed missions to space. China's manned space flights began in
2003 when a former fighter pilot, Yang Liwei, was sent into orbit in a
small bronze-coloured capsule, the Shenzhou-5, and became China's first
man in space and an instant hero cheered by millions at home.
The space station was also an emblem of China's growing clout and
confidence in its space endeavours and a challenger to the United States
in the domain, after being isolated from the NASA-led ISS and banned by
U.S. law from any collaboration, direct or indirect, with the American
space agency.
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Astronauts Fei Junlong, Deng Qingming
and Zhang Lu attend a see-off ceremony before the Shenzhou-15
spaceflight mission to build China's space station, at Jiuquan
Satellite Launch Center, near Jiuquan, Gansu province, China
September 29, 2022. cnsphoto via REUTERS
FUTURE 'TAIKONAUTS'
Leading the Shenzhou-15 mission was Fei Junlong, 57, who hailed from
China's first batch of astronaut trainees in the late 1990s. His
previous visit to space was 17 years ago as commander of China's
second-ever crewed spaceflight.
Fei was flanked by Deng Qingming, 56, who had trained for 24 years
as an astronaut but had never been chosen for a mission until
Shenzhou-15. They were joined by former air force pilot Zhang Lu,
46, also a space debutant.
The astronauts will live and work on the T-shaped space outpost for
six months.
The next batch of "taikonauts", coined from the Chinese word for
space, to board the station, in 2023, will be picked from the third
generation of astronauts with scientific backgrounds. The first and
second batches of astronauts in the 1990s-2000s were all former air
force pilots.
China has started the selection process for the fourth batch,
seeking candidates with doctoral degrees in disciplines from
biology, physics and chemistry to biomedical engineering and
astronomy.
The selection process has also been opened to applicants from Hong
Kong and Macau for the first time.
During the space station's operation over the next decade, China is
expected to launch two crewed missions to the orbiting outpost each
year.
Resident astronauts are expected to conduct more than 1,000
scientific experiments - from studying how plants adapt in space to
how fluids behave in microgravity.
While still in its infancy compared with NASA's technologies and
experience, China's space programme has come far since the mid-20th
century, when the country's late leader Mao Zedong lamented that
China could not even launch a potato into orbit.
(Reporting by Ryan Woo and Liangping Gao;Editing by Alison Williams,
Jonathan Oatis and Gerry Doyle)
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