'Dreaming of the Heavens': China launches final module to space station
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[October 31, 2022]
By Ryan Woo and Liangping Gao
BEIJING (Reuters) -China on Monday launched
the last of the three modules that will comprise its space station, set
to be the second permanently inhabited outpost in low-earth orbit after
the NASA-led International Space Station.
The uncrewed Mengtian, or "Dreaming of the Heavens", module was launched
atop China's most powerful rocket, the Long March 5B, at 3:37 p.m. (0737
GMT) from the Wenchang Space Launch Centre in the southern island
province of Hainan.
In April 2021, China began construction of its space station with the
launch of the Tianhe module, the main living quarters for astronauts. In
July this year it launched Wentian, or "Quest for the Heavens", a
laboratory module where scientific experiments will be performed.
The 23-tonne Mengtian, also a laboratory module, is expected to dock
with an axial port at one end of Tianhe later on Monday.
But the space station will only take on its final T-shape - with Tianhe
as the core flanked by the two lab modules - when Mengtian is
repositioned, while in orbit, to one of Tianhe's radial ports on its
side.
The completion of the Chinese space station, designed for a lifespan of
at least 10 years, will be a milestone in China's ambitions in low-rarth
orbit, with NASA's aging ISS potentially ceasing operation by the end of
the decade.
GROWING CLOUT
The Chinese-built "Celestial Palace", as the space station is known at
home, will also be an emblem of China's growing clout and
self-sufficiency in its space endeavours and a challenger to the United
States in the domain, after being isolated from the ISS and other
collaboration with NASA.
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The space station also caps President Xi Jinping's 10 years as
leader of China's ruling Communist Party.
During the station's lifetime, China is planning more than 1,000
scientific experiments - from studying how plants adapt in space to
how fluids behave in microgravity.
International demand for experiments to be conducted on the Chinese
station will also rise if the ISS retires in the coming years. More
than 3,000 science experiments have been performed aboard the ISS
since November 2000.
China has approved at least nine proposals from scientists in
countries ranging from Switzerland to India in the first batch of
experiments in cooperation with the United Nations space office.
Russia's space agency in August unveiled a physical model of a
planned Russian-built space station, the final form of which would
be years away.
Two more missions this year are needed before China's station is
ready for operation.
An automated cargo resupply vessel - the Tianzhou-5 - is expected to
be launched in November, ahead of the arrival of three astronauts in
December on the Shenzhou-15 spacecraft for long-term habitation on
the space station.
China's space programme has come far since late leader Mao Zedong
lamented that the country could not even launch a potato into orbit.
China became the third country to put a man in space with its own
rocket, in October 2003, following the former Soviet Union and the
United States.
(Reporting by Ryan Woo; Editing by Shri Navaratnam, Edmund Klamann
and Nick Macfie)
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