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China Plans 5-day Manned Space Mission

rune writes "Both the BBC and The Register have articles on China's next manned space mission. This time two taikonauts are planned to be on board the Shenzou VI spacecraft sometime during 2005 for about five days. There is also a brief mention of the plans of the Chinese Space Agency for lunar exploration." hrld1,kon adds a link to this article on Chinaview, the official English-language news source for the People's Republic of China.

8 of 245 comments (clear)

  1. LOL by DarkMantle · · Score: 5, Insightful

    From the Article.. "In order to create a craft capable of orbiting in space for five days, scientists say they have been trying to reduce weight and improve the performance of onboad instrumentation."

    The funny part is... the US sent men to the moon in the late 60's and the entire spacecraft had less computer power then a 486 computer... And they need to improve current technology???

    Just goes to show, with todays technology, we sometimes forget we can simplify things.

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    DarkMantle I been bored, so I started a blog.
  2. China needs to join the ISS by Ryu2 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Currently, the International Space Station consists of pretty much every spacefaring nation on Earth, with the exception of China... due to US uncertainty over its motives. So China is planning to go its own way, build its own station, etc.

    I don't know about you, but as a Chinese living in the USA, I would really like for China to join the ISS -- we don't need another Cold War style space race, and cooperation with the world will, I believe, lead to greater transparency and scrutiny of China's space program anyhow.

    Indeed, it's absurd that China is currently one of only two nations with a operational manned spaceflight capability, but isn't allowed to join the ISS -- when the ISS is suffering from major logistical resupply problems due to the grounding of the shuttle.

    China has, for years, been on a path from isolation back in the 1950s and 1960s, to being a part of the world community in many ways. The US needs to ditch its outdated paranoia, or else the other nations (Russia, EU, etc) need to grow some balls and admit China into the consortium for the benefit of all sides concerned.

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    There's 10 types of people in this world, those who understand binary and those who don't.
    1. Re:China needs to join the ISS by cosmo7 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I think one thing that sets China's space program apart from those of the US and Russia is the Chinese' ability to dedicate themselves to long-term programs that do not produce results for decades. Look at the Three Gorges Dam; no western nation would commit themselves to a project that economically makes the ISS look like a summer camp project.

  3. Re:I'm sorry... by Cali+Thalen · · Score: 5, Insightful

    POTENTIAL superpower?!? You'd better hope they don't decide to provide proof of it...

    Someone post some stats about China's military numbers and their nuclear arsenal...I'm too lazy to google...

    No I'm not...2.5 million in the military, first successful nuclear test, 1964, hydrogen in 1967....OK they're #5 among the main nuclear powers, but that's still ~120 nuclear missles can do enough damage to consider them pretty powerful.

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    Chaos, panic, disorder...my work here is done.
  4. Re:This is way cool... by AndyChrist · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Five way, if you count private enterprise separately. Six if you count the ESA separately as well.

    I wonder if the current partners will try and bring China on board the space station project? It would probably be comforting to know there was another party that could reach it if the US and Russia (at the same time) were rendered unable to.

    Well, so long as no one is trying to render anyone else unable to, it's comforting.

  5. At least somebody is doing something by Taco+Cowboy · · Score: 4, Insightful



    Something is always better than nothing.

    Ever since the space shuttle disaster, and the bankrupt of Russia, both the Americans and Russians are stuck with the ultra-expensive ISS.

    The Chinese are doing something, and they ought to be congratulated.

    If the Indians can do it earlier than the Chinese, so much the better. I also heard that Brazil also has something under development.

    How about the Europeans ?

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    Muchas Gracias, Señor Edward Snowden !
    1. Re:At least somebody is doing something by cosmo7 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The ISS doesn't have to be ultra-expensive. The space program has become the pork barrel smorgasbord of American politics. If completion and operation of the ISS was opened to independent contractors costs would plummet.

      Think about it: DC. Huge contracts. Political oversight. Do you really think that money is being spent in the most cost-effective way?

    2. Re:At least somebody is doing something by luvirini · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Unfortunately ISS has to be expensive for the reasons you say and a few more, like the safety requirement. Any new technology is dangerous and people die when making them better. In order for things to get better you that needs to happen. The total number of people who died in the early years of aviation was huge, but again for political reasons that cannot be allowed in the space programs.