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China Sending Two People Into Space

henrypijames writes "As reported widely in Chinese media, China has began production of and launch preparations for it's new Shenzhou ("divine ship") 6 spaceship. While being roughly equal in design to Shenzhou 5 which sent the first Chinese into space last year (although having capacity for three persons), Shenzhou 6 is supposed to carry two "Taikonaut" next year."

20 of 391 comments (clear)

  1. Wikipedia, as usual, rocks by another+misanthrope · · Score: 5, Informative

    snippet from Wikipedia's listing for the Shenzhou - lots more in the link!

    Design

    Like the Soyuz, the Shenzhou consists of three modules; a forward "orbital" module, a reentry capsule in the middle, and an aft service module. This division is based on the principle of minimizing the amount of material to be returned to Earth. Anything placed in the orbital or service modules does not require heat shielding, and this greatly increases the space available to the spacecraft without increasing weight as much as it would if those modules were also able to withstand reentry.

    The orbital module contains space for experiments, crew-serviced or operated equipment, and in-orbit habitation. The reentry capsule contains seating for the crew, and is the only portion of the Shenzhou which returns to Earth's surface. The aft service module contains life support and other equipment required for the functioning of the Shenzhou. Two pairs of solar panels, one pair on the service module and the other pair on the orbital module, have a total area of over 40 square metres, indicating average electrical power over 1.5 kW (three times that of Soyuz and greater than that of the original Mir base module).

    Unlike the Soyuz, the orbital module was equipped with its own propulsion, solar power, and control systems, allowing autonomous flight. In the future the orbital modules could also be left behind on a Chinese space station as additional station modules. In the unmanned test flights launched so far, the orbital module of each Shenzhou was left functioning in orbit for several days after the reentry capsule's return.

  2. Re:Uh Oh ... by curne · · Score: 0, Informative

    You know those Chinese multiply like rabbits: 2, 4, 8, 16 ...

    Technically, that's not "breeding like rabbits".
    Your series is polynomic. A rabbit population will increase exponentially, given the resources and space.

    --
    All interpreted languages are abstractions over Lisp
  3. Why Taikonaut ? by rholliday · · Score: 5, Informative

    In case you were wondering like me ...

    "Taikong" is a Chinese word that means space or cosmos. The resulted prefix "taiko-" is similar to "astro-" and "cosmo-" that makes three words perfectly symmetric, both in meaning and in form. Removing "g" from "taikong" is to make the word short and easy to pronounce. On the other side, its pronounciation is also close to "taikong ren", the Chinese words "space men".

    --
    Xbox reviews.. We think they're funny.
    1. Re:Why Taikonaut ? by Uber+Banker · · Score: 5, Informative

      Taikonaut was a word that was coined for Western audiences as it would fit in with the terms Cosmonaut and Astronaut. The term Taikonaut is not used in China, instead the word 'yuhangyuan' (literally 'astro-navigator') is used - which refers to Astronauts, Cosmonauts and 'Taikonauts' without distinction of nationality.

  4. inevitable dr strangelove quote by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    not a troll

  5. They've got to hurry... by ahh · · Score: 5, Informative

    ... as space is the ultimate high ground on military thinking and United States is publicly touting to build space-based weaponry to maintain supremecy.

    This is just the beginning of next arms race, even India is building nuclear attack platform in space.

    Arms control is dead, welcome new instability.

  6. Reuter/CNN report by henrypijames · · Score: 2, Informative

    There is a Reuter report on CNN online, with practically the same information as the Xinhua report.

  7. Re:I hope china builds a nuclear rocket by S3D · · Score: 5, Informative

    In fact there 2 type of Nuclear propulsion : Without fallout (Nuclear Termal Rocket (NTR) - basically just flying reactor) and with fallout ( Orion - nuclear bomp explosion pushed ship, Nuclear salt water rocket NSWR). AFAIK there is still no usable "build now" NTR design, and overall NTR probably couldn't make one stage to orbit and back reusable trip. NSWR is a radioactive disaster, usable only in space. Orion - battleship sized spaceship on the pushing plate, pushed by nuke explosion probaly most realistic nuclear design, and probaly could be built now. If launched in the Antarctica, radioactive pollution wouldn't be quite disastrous, but still costing one cancer death per launch (for all the world), by some estimation. So until the progress with NTR nuclear propulsion is better used in space (and there is no electromagnetic pulse in space for nuke too)

  8. Re:China Sending Two People Into Space by mafeesh · · Score: 4, Informative

    Except that it *does* mention bringing them back.

    He said astronauts would stay aboard the orbiting lab for short periods, with spacecraft ferrying them back and forth.

  9. Re:why "divine ship" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    stupid slashdot doesn't allow post in gb2312, anyway there are Chinese words sounded Shenzhou. One is divine places (that means China), another is divine vessel

    Chinese divine is not the same divine in your bible, we don't have God with human shape .

  10. Re:Me-too technology by shfted! · · Score: 5, Informative

    The USA is less rich than it appears. A lot of the high lifestyle that even the lowest classes live is all financed on consumer debt. People are already reaching their credit limits. Once people can no longer finance new things, they can't purchase new things, and you know where that leads. Like any venture financed with debt, it must return enough to more than compensate for the cost of servicing the debt. As consumer tend to only buy things which don't make money, they're taken on huge amounts of debt that will reduce their buying power for many years to come.

    The only difference between the USSR and the USA is that the debt is riding more on the individual consumers in the US. Either way, the people owe lots. The US hasn't provided a decent standard of living for its quater billion citizens.

    --
    He who laughs last is stuck in a time dilation bubble.
  11. Re:Me-too technology by Anonymovs+Coward · · Score: 3, Informative
    We went to war during the great depression. A war that wasn't directly against us (until Pearl Harbor).

    I'm not sure what they teach in history classes these days. The US went to war only after Pearl Harbour. Until then, which means when France and most of Western Europe had been occupied and the Nazis had been at Britain's doorstep for several months, the US was neutral---precisely because the war "wasn't directly against us".

  12. You Do Realise Money's Just Paper, Right? by Vagary · · Score: 2, Informative

    The only reason capitalist governments need taxes, is that they need to buy stuff that's being produced by private industry. If all the production is public, then the government doesn't need to use money internally at all. A communist government redistributes the gains of labour the same way a socialist government redistributes income.

  13. Going to Space Improves Quality of Life by Vagary · · Score: 3, Informative

    Standard of living is an ends in itself (well, maybe for Americans), it's a measure of quality of life potential. However, quality of life can be raised by factors other than increase of income; factors such as a better environment or more available technology.

    You don't try and feed a billion people by having them all sustinence farm -- you have a few of them farm and a few of them build fertilizer to help the farmers and a few of them build computers to help the chemists build the fertilizer to help the farmers and a few of them to build shiny things to trade for resources the engineers need to build the computers to help the chemists build the fertilizer to help the farmers. And how do you get better at building shiny things? Go to space.

  14. Re:"Divine ship" eh? by rangek · · Score: 2, Informative

    I think a better translation is "magic ship".

    http://www.sworld.com.au/steven/space/shenzhou/

    http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/1892598.stm

    And others... IANACT (I am not a Chinese translator). Maybe some one who speaks Chinese could comment?

  15. Re:Uh, what? by genmanath · · Score: 3, Informative

    I would suppose that the 5-7 day mission is meant to "test the waters", as it were, and perhaps to set a milestone, have the taikonauts talk to school-children, etc. The first few times that the USA and USSR put manned capsules into orbit, they did nothing more than orbit and re-enter. However, that's been done a lot (technology is proven, etc), so the Chinese may have to skip the orbiting for the sake of orbiting's sake and get right to work on whatever-they'll-do.

    --
    G. M. Manath

    Go not to the Elves for counsel, for they will say both 'Yes' and 'No.'

  16. Re:Yay for variety.. by DAldredge · · Score: 2, Informative

    The poverty line in the US isn't set as the same level as most other countries. It is set at a much higher level. Most people under the poverty line in the US have phone service, cable and a place to live (rent or own). Food can be provided by our food stamp program.

  17. Re:Yay for variety.. by mickwd · · Score: 4, Informative

    "Maybe the European Union can focus on treating less developed countries, that were formally colonized by them, would treat them fairly and give them preferential treatment on imports."

    Funny you should mention this. I believe the EU tried to do this with bananas imported from poor countries in the caribbean. The USA, prompted by large american banana companies, took them to the WTO to prevent it.

    Link here.

    That said, the EU is still too much like a rich man's club.

  18. Re:I hope china builds a nuclear rocket by S3D · · Score: 2, Informative

    You lost me here.... the EM pulse is generated from all that energy being released and doesn't need a medium to travel in, as it is electromagnetic AFAIK ECM is not produced by explosion itself, but a result of air ionization by the radiation produced by explosion. There is no air to ionize in the vacuum, so no ECM.

  19. Re:"Divine ship" eh? by x0n · · Score: 3, Informative

    Well, "divine ship" (or "devine vessel" as some have called it) is only a western interpretation of the word "Shen-Zhou", and a stereotypical one at that. "Shen" can also mean magic as well as divine, and "zhou" can mean boat, vessel or ship.

    We as westerners, are all caught up with the image of the Chinese as mystical people selling us Mogwai/Gremlins and rubbing ground rhino horn into their heads each morning. This is just not true. I'd say most Chinese would prefer to translate "Shen-Zhou" as "Magic Boat/Ship". I mean, the Chinese for Aladdin's Magic Carpet could also be translated as his "Divine Floorcovering"; it doesn't really work, does it?

    - Oisin

    --

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