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China ramps up its space program

Space.com:  Chinese space officials are talking about going ahead with a two-person space shot in 2005 and creating a space tourism industry within 20 years.
/ Source: Space.com

China’s human spaceflight ambitions are surging forward, ranging from new spacesuits for a planned two-person space shot in 2005 to establishing a commercial space tourism industry in 20 years.

In a spate of reports by China’s Xinhuanet news service, China space officials announced that the country’s second manned spacecraft — Shenzhou 6 — will spend five days orbiting Earth, giving its crew time to perform science experiments.

“Shenzhou 6 will be blasted into space sometime next year,” said Zuo Saichun, a spokesperson with the China Aerospace Science and Technology group that manufactures the spacecraft and its Long March 2F booster. “This spacecraft will make new breakthroughs in China’s manned space technology.”

Zuo’s comments were among several statements released by China space officials at the Fifth China International Aviation and Aerospace Exhibition in the city of Zhuhai. In a separate report, the Beijing Morning Post stated that September 2005 was a potential launch target.

“The Chinese are going from a one-man shot to a two-man shot in a relatively shorter amount of time than the U.S. or the Russians,” Dean Cheng, a China space specialist with the CNA Corp. in Arlinghton, Va., said in a telephone interview with Space.com. “This would seem to indicate a faster learning curve.”

Second shot
China entered the realm of manned spaceflight on Oct. 15, 2003, when astronaut Yang Liwei and his Shenzhou 5 spacecraft rode a Long March 2F rocket into space from the Jiuquan Space Launch Center in Inner Mongolia.

Yang spent 21 hours in space and orbited Earth 14 times. With his successful landing, China became the third country to independently launch a human into Earth orbit, following Russia and the United States.

While Yang flew solo, the Shenzhou space capsule — a modern design based on Russia’s Soyuz spacecraft — is capable of holding up to three astronauts.

“So it’s not going to be a two-man shot in the Soviet style, with the crew stuffed into a one-man capsule,” Cheng said. “I would expect these guys to get out of their seats and take some basic photogenic shots.”

The first multiperson spaceflight was launched by the Soviet Union in Oct. 12, 1964, with three cosmonauts tucked into their Voskhod capsule, a modified version of the one-man vehicle that carried cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin on the first manned spaceflight in 1961.

A chance for transparency
With Shenzhou 6, China now has the opportunity to showcase its space program and highlight its independent accomplishments for manned spaceflight, analysts say.

“This will be an enormous opportunity for China to be much more transparent about its space program,” Cheng said.

Such openness, he added, would not only highlight China’s space efforts among its citizens, but also clear up misconceptions that the nation has been relying on proven Russian technology to launch humans into space.

“It’s not at all clear that the Shenzhou spacecraft were simply extended, larger versions of the Soyuz,” Cheng said. “It seemed pretty clear they modified them, and it would be interesting if the Chinese were to tell us what they have done.”

New spacesuits for Shenzhou 6
The Shenzhou 6 spaceflight will feature the first use of new, improved spacesuits that are lighter and removable, the newspaper Beijing Morning Post stated.

During the Shenzhou 5 space shot, Yang wore a spacesuit weighing about 22 pounds (10 kilograms) for the entire 21-hour duration of his flight. It was not designed to be removed once Yang entered his space capsule.

“The original suits were based on old Soviet technology,” Cheng said. “It will be interesting to see what kind of telemetry thee new ones return, and how much of it are actually Chinese-produced components.”

While the cost of the new Shenzhou 6 spacesuits has not been released, the spacecraft will carry up to three additional suits as spares during the flight. They consist primarily of a body, gloves, boots and helmet, and are designed specifically to be removed by their occupants inside the Shenzhou capsule, spacesuit designers with the Space Medicine Engineering Institute told the Post.

Yang’s space clothing cost about $1.2 million (10 million yuan), excluding design costs, which if included would bring the total up to about $12 million (100 million yuan), researchers told the Post.

Crew members on Shenzhou 6 will have a variety of up to 50 types of space food for meals during their weeklong trip, and the added convenience of a space toilet.

Commercial trips in 20 years
China’s top space official said a commercial spaceflight industry is two decades away for private citizens seeking a taste of space.

China will “establish a sound mechanism to commercialize its space technology,” Yuan Jiajun, chief commander of China’s space program, said during a recent symposium in Shanghai, according to Xinhuanet.

Citing the recent successful — and privately funded — flights of in the United States, Yuan said the development of manned spacecraft around the world could propel China’s space tourism.

Cheng said that while there are cultural obstacles for China to overcome to commercialize space, there is a waiting audience that could pay for space trips.

“The Chinese space program is not only government-run, it is partly military-run, so your first problem is a fundamental cultural clash with the military,” Cheng said. “But are there Chinese who would be interested? Absolutely.”