China
has launched its latest manned space mission - whose crew includes its first
female astronaut, Liu Yang.
The
Shenzhou-9 capsule rode to orbit atop a Long March rocket from the Jiuquan
spaceport on the edge of the Gobi desert.
Ms
Liu and her two male colleagues are heading to the Tiangong space lab.
They
will spend over a week living and working on the 335km-high vessel, testing new
systems and conducting a number of scientific experiments.
Before
leaving, the crew were presented to Communist Party officials, VIPs and the
media.
Wearing
their flight suits and sitting behind glass, they waved and smiled.
"We
will obey orders, listen to directions and be calm; and co-ordinate together to
successfully complete China's first manned rendezvous and docking
mission," said Commander Jing Haipeng.
China's
top legislator, Wu Bangguo, wished them well and told them: "We are
expecting your safe return."
The
Shenzhou-9 spacecraft lifted off on schedule at 18:37 local time (10:37 GMT;
11:37 BST).
All
systems appeared to function normally and eight minutes later, the spacecraft
had entered orbit. Very shortly after Shenzhou-9 had unfurled its solar panels.
It
will take a couple of days to reach Tiangong. A docking is planned for Monday
at 15:00 Beijing time (07:00 GMT; 08:00 BST).
Mr
Jing, 46, is making his second spaceflight after participating in the
Shenzhou-7 outing in 2008 - the mission that included China's first spacewalk.
His
flight engineers are both first-timers, however.
Liu
Wang, 42, a People's Liberation Army fighter pilot, has got his chance after
spending 14 years in the China National Space Administration's astronaut corps.
Thirty-three-year-old
Liu Yang, also a fighter pilot, has on the other hand emerged as China's first
woman astronaut after just two years of training.
Her
role in the mission will be to run the medical experiments in orbit.
Shenzhou-9
follows on from the unmanned Shenzhou-8 venture last year that tested the
technologies required to join a capsule to the Tiangong lab.
Those
manoeuvres went well and gave Chinese officials the confidence to send up
humans.
When
it arrives at Tiangong, the Shenzhou-9 craft is expected to make a fully
automated docking, but there is a plan to try a manual docking later in the
mission.
This
would see the crew uncouple their vehicle from the lab, retreat to a defined
distance and then command their ship to re-attach itself.
Liu
Wang will take the lead in this activity. "We've done many
simulations," he said during the pre-launch press conference.
"We've
mastered the techniques and skills. China has first class technologies and
astronauts, and therefore I'm confident we will fulfil the manual
rendezvous."
Tiangong
is the next step in a strategy that Beijing authorities hope will lead
ultimately to the construction and operation of a large, permanently manned
space station.
It
is merely the prototype for the modules China expects to build and join in
orbit. Mastering the rendezvous and docking procedures is central to this
strategy.
Patriotic
pride
At
about 60 tonnes in mass, this proposed station would be considerably smaller
than the 400-tonne international platform operated by the US, Russia, Europe,
Canada and Japan, but its mere presence in the sky would nonetheless represent
a remarkable achievement.
Concept
drawings describe a core module weighing some 20-22 tonnes, flanked by two
slightly smaller laboratory vessels.
Officials
say it would be supplied by freighters in exactly the same way that robotic
cargo ships keep the International Space Station (ISS) today stocked with fuel,
food, water, air, and spare parts.
China
is investing billions of dollars in its space programme. It has a strong space
science effort under way, with two orbiting satellites having already been
launched to the Moon. A third mission is expected to put a rover on the lunar
surface.
The
Asian country is also deploying its own satellite-navigation system known as
BeiDou, or Compass.
Before
leaving Earth, Liu Yang said the Shenzhou-9 mission would generate further pride
in Chinese people. "When I was a pilot I flew in the sky; now as an
astronaut, I'm going into space. It's higher and it's farther," she said.
"I
have a lot of tasks to fulfil, but besides these tasks I want to feel the
unique environment in space and admire the views. I want to explore a beautiful
Earth, a beautiful home.
"I
want to record all my feelings and my work, to share with my friends, and my
comrades and my future colleagues."-British Broadcasting Corporation (June
16, 2012)
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