A Chinese space capsule
carrying three astronauts returned safely to Earth Tuesday (June 25), wrapping
up the longest manned space mission in the nation's history.
The Shenzhou 10
spacecraft touched down at 8:08 p.m. EDT Tuesday (0008 GMT), capping a 15-day
mission to China's orbitingTiangong 1 lab module. The spacecraft landed in
northern China's Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, where the local time was
8:08 a.m. on Wednesday.
During their time
aboard Tiangong 1, Nie Haisheng, Wang Yaping (the second Chinese woman to fly
in space) and Zhang Xiaoguang performed a variety of experiments, beamed a
microgravity science lesson down to 330 schoolkids and chatted withPresident Xi
Jinping.
Xi lauded the three
taikonauts (as Chinese astronauts are called) during the phone call on Monday
(June 24) and stressed that their mission is part of a broader plan to advance
China's presence and capabilities in the final frontier.
"The space dream
is part of the dream to make China stronger. With the development of space
programs, the Chinese people will take bigger strides to explore further into
space," Xi said, the state-run Xinhua news agency reported.
Shenzhou 10 launched
June 11 and docked automatically with Tiangong 1 two days later. The spaceships
separated briefly on Saturday (June 22) before joining up again, this time in a
manual docking with Nie piloting the Shenzhou 10. The vessels detached for good
on Monday evening (June 24), with Shenzhou 10 then flying around the lab module
in a rendezvous test.
Such spaceflight
maneuvers are viewed as key steps toward the construction and long-term
occupancy of an orbiting space station, which China hopes to have up and
running by 2020.
The Shenzhou 10 mission
was China's fifth human spaceflight. The nation first launched a taikonaut in
October 2003, sending Yang Liwei into orbit for 21 hours. A two-person crew
spent five days in space two years later, and three taikonauts blasted off on a
three-day trip in September 2008.
The next manned mission
was Shenzhou 9, which sent three taikonauts — including Liu Yang, China's first
woman in space — on the first flight to Tiangong 1 in June 2012. The 13-day
mission featured automatic and manual dockings with the lab module, as Shenzhou
10 did.
Tiangong 1 launched to
Earth orbit in September 2011 and was first visited by the unmanned Shenzhou 8
spacecraft two months later. China plans to launch a larger module, called
Tiangong 2, later this year. ("Tiangong" means "Heavenly
Palace" in Chinese, while "Shenzhou" is typically translated as
"Divine Vessel.")
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