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China's Second Manned Space Flight

desert island writes "As if to coincide with Russia's space tourist, Beijing News speculated that China's second manned space launch will occur after the October 1-7 holiday. The spacecraft Shenzhou VI, with two astronauts, will be launched from the Jiuquan Space Launch Center in northwest China's Gansu province and will last 119 hours." From the article: "The mission will differ markedly from China's first manned space voyage, the Shenzhou V, which was a solo flight that lasted 21 hours in October 2003. China's space program is still shrouded in secrecy with little known about events until several days before they happen. However since the success of the first manned flight, authorities have shown a little more transparency."

9 of 152 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Plagiarized? by radicalskeptic · · Score: 5, Informative

    You can find more information in this Wikipedia article. Apparently the general time of the launch has been known for a while, because at the moment the article states a September or October launch (and a different Wikipedia article on the rockets themselves specifically states an October launch).

    By the way, it looks as though it is shaping up to be a very interesting flight

    The crew will change out of their new lighter space suits, conduct scientific experiments, and enter the orbital module. In addition, their menu will be expanded from 30 to 50 courses. A new toilet will also be available.

    --
    WARNING: If accidentally read, induce vomiting.
  2. 1979 was a bad year for US (wo)manned spaceflight by adnonsense · · Score: 4, Informative

    Her first mission was 1985, she joined NASA in 1978. She was also the Capcom for the most recent mission. See: Shannon Lucid.

  3. Re:Plagiarized? by jandersen · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The thing about working in a centralised system is that they can seriously get their act together and do things. The western world is ripe with examples of what happens when you work in a free market and have to find a consesus, ideally through competing in the said market.

    Look at the old Soviet Union; yes, they were governed by spectacularly stupid men, but bigods they could get their act together and DO things on a huge scale. And the Chinese can too, plus they are seriously clever. If they want to go to the Moon or Mars and establish a colony, then that is what they will, I'm sure. And they will probably get there before Bush & Co. can get their brains into first gear.

  4. Hey~ it is no news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    Oh~ It is no news. The media in Hong Kong and China reports the launch of Shenzhou VI few months ago, which says:

    - The spaceship will launch in the coming October
    - 2 astronauts will be onboard
    - 3 pairs of astronauts will be chosen for final stage training, and the authority will pick 1 pair before launch to carry our the mission
    - Team work ability is an important criteria during the astronauts selection process
    - The ship will fly for 5 days, five times more than Shenzhou V, and the authority claims that the stability and reliability of the ship has been improved.
    - The carrying rocket is CZ-2F (Long March 2F), same as the one for Shenzhou V
    - No spacewalk (will do it during the 3rd manned spaceflight, which is scheduled for 2007)
    - The astronauts are allowed to take off their spacesuits when the ship is in orbit, which is different from the arrangement for Shenzhou V's astronaut.
    - The astronauts will enter the "Orbit Module" and carry out experiments during the journey
    - One of the experiments is to test the response of pig's sperms under space radiation
    - Many delicious Chinese traditional food will be packed as space food for the astronauts, which will include spicy chicken, preserved vegetables, and assorted beans and rice

    Source:

    hk.news.yahoo.com
    military.china.com
    www.people.com.cn

  5. Enough with it. by slasho81 · · Score: 4, Informative
    From Wikipedia:
    Taikonaut is sometimes used in English for astronauts from China by Western news media. The term was coined in May 1998 by Chiew Lee Yih from Malaysia, who used it first in newsgroups. Almost simultaneously, Chen Lan coined it for use in the Western media based on the term taikong, Chinese for space. In Chinese itself, however, a single term yuhang yuan ("universe navigator") has long been used for astronauts and cosmonauts. The closest term using taikong is a colloquialism taikong ren ("space human") which refers to people who have actually been in space. Official English text issued by the Chinese government uses astronaut.
  6. Re:Defection by spectrokid · · Score: 4, Funny

    euh, they can get the jeans over there too you know... Actually they are quite a lot cheaper there... Get to think of it, they are actually made over there...

    --

    10 ?"Hello World" life was simple then

  7. Centralized by Mark_MF-WN · · Score: 4, Insightful
    The US isn't really a free-market state at all. There's a remarkable amount of centralized control -- just like in every western nation. The US is just a capable of huge projects. Just look at the US highway system (the envy of large spacious nations everywhere, particularly those nations that contain the transcanada highway), the Apollo missions, the ridiculous number of space probes Nasa launches, or the 10 million or so troops that the US pulled together to send to the second world war. None of those things would be possible in truly capitalist state. The US is far more socialistic than they give themselves credit for.

    How many countries would just rebuild a destroyed city? Or for that matter, rebuild destroyed nations like Afghanistan, Iraq, or Japan and Germany? It takes enormous centralized wealth and control to do these things. The big advantage of the US is that it allows a large sphere of free economic activity that generates wealth and talent, which are then available for ultra-projects.

  8. Enough of the BS by marlinSpike · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Every time there's a story about China or India, I open the comments sections prepared for all the jingos and ethnocentric ignoramuses who unfortunately make the dicussion into a bar-room brawl.

    In the post cold-war and freer-trade era, there are few zero-sum games around, but apparently someone hasn't told some folk on here that the world has moved far beyond them.

  9. Re:Twisted Priority by grumpyman · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Dude, talking about twisted priorities. Take a look at these figures:

    Chinese space exploration budget: ~US$2B
    NASA budget: ~US$16B
    China population: 1300M
    US population: 295M
    1 Chinese Citizen's Share: US$1.54
    1 US Citizen's Share: US$54.24
    1:35
    China GDP per capita: US$5600
    US GDP per capita: US$40100
    1:7

    China GDP: 7.26T
    US GDP: 11.75T

    "Obsolete equipments"? Have you worked in the NASA building rockets and spyed in the Chinese space agency? When Chinese goverment got something working it's ALWAYS because of a draconian government (so is when something goes terribly wrong). Dude, US government is taking effectively 5 times more than the chinese government for your space program.

    "...Mars shot and be done with"? Not before the Republican wins again and they boost the budget by 10 times, not counting the additional number of years.

    "a draconian government mandate at the back of its ten millions of poor destitute citizenry". In US, we have Bush and 37M people in poverty.