Jambhalheart Posted November 3, 2011 Report Posted November 3, 2011 [b]CHINA has taken a crucial step towards fulfilling its ambition to set up a manned space station by completing its first successful docking high above Earth. [/b] The [i]Shenzhou VIII [/i]spacecraft joined onto the Tiangong-1 experimental module at 4.37am (AEDT today), silently coupling more than 343 kilometres above the Earth's surface, the Xinhua news agency said. The spacecraft, whose name translates as "divine vessel", is a modified version of the capsules that took the first Chinese astronauts into space as part of the rising power's ambitious exploration program. China aims to complete construction of a space station by 2020, a goal that requires it to perfect docking technology - a delicate manoeuvre that the Russians and Americans successfully completed in the 1960s. The technology is hard to master because the two vessels, placed in the same orbit and revolving around Earth at high speed, must come together progressively to avoid destroying each other. China sees its space program as a symbol of its global stature, growing technical expertise, and the Communist Party's success in turning around the fortunes of the once poverty-stricken nation. Chinese leaders including Premier Wen Jiabao were at the Beijing Aerospace Flight Control Centre to watch a live broadcast of the docking, while President Hu Jintao, who is in France for the G20 summit, sent a congratulatory message. The docking took eight minutes and was aided by microwave radars, laser distance measurers and video cameras. The two spacecraft, each weighing about eight tonnes, smoothly captured, cushioned, connected and locked onto each other, Xinhua reported. "To link up two vehicles travelling at 7.8 km per second in orbit, with a margin of error of no more than 20 centimetres, is like 'finding a needle in a haystack'," Zhou Jianping, chief designer of China's manned space program, said. "This will make it possible for China to carry out space exploration on a larger scale." He said the country was now equipped with the technology and capacity to construct a space station, adding that Shenzhou VIII might be used as the prototype for a series of spaceships. China plans to make more than 20 manned space voyages in the next decade, Xinhua said. A Chinese astronaut trainer is among six volunteers who will emerge tomorrow into the outside world after spending almost 18 months in isolation at a Russian research centre to test the effects on humans of a flight to Mars. China began its manned spaceflight program in 1990 after buying Russian technology and in 2003 became the third country to send humans into space, after the former Soviet Union and the United States. In September 2008, the [i]Shenzhou VII[/i], piloted by three astronauts, carried out China's first space walk. The [i]Shenzhou VIII [/i]spacecraft took off on Tuesday from the Jiuquan base in the northwestern province of Gansu from where Tiangong-1 - or "Heavenly Palace" - also launched on September 29. The two vessels will stay linked together for around 12 days before separating and uniting again at a later date, said Wu Ping, spokeswoman for China's manned space program.
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