BEIJING, Jan. 16, (Xinhuanet)--Once China has sent
astronauts into space, it will launch space laboratories to be manned by
scientists for short periods, space program planners said.
It will later set up a permanently manned space
station.
Zhang Qingwei, the president of the China Aerospace
Science and Technology Corp, said China is developing a new family of powerful
launch vehicles to propel a 20-ton space station.
China plans to launch its manned station "at an
appropriate time this century," Zhang said. But he declined to give a solid time
frame for the launch.
China's four unmanned test spacecraft were all sent into
orbit atop the corporation's Long March 2F rockets.
But the new launchers will be built according to a modular
design based on three models from the core stages -- 2.25 meters, 3.35 meters
and 5 meters in diameter. Chinese researchers are also working to produce
China's own liquid hydrogen, liquid oxygen and refined kerosene to produce a
powerful propulsion fuel that will leave no pollutants or toxins, he said.
China launched its manned space program in 1992 -- made up
of seven systems.
The country's manned mission has four goals: to develop
basic manned space flight technology; observe the Earth and undertake
experiments in space; help design space vehicles; and accumulate experience for
a large space station.
Participating in the research, construction and testing of
these systems are thousands of scientists and technicians from more than 3,000
organizations.
Thanks to their concerted efforts, China has mastered
vital space technology, developed advanced carrier rockets and spacecraft and
built a spaceship application system. These are among the country's highest
scientific and technological achievements.
Chinese scientists are conducting a series of feasibility
studies for a possible moon exploration program, according to Ouyang Ziyuan, the
program's chief scientist and a senior member of the Chinese Academy of
Sciences.
The scientists hope that they will one day be able to look
for valuable resources and examine the environment and geological structure of
the moon, Ouyang said.
Apart from abundant and stable solar energy on the moon's
surface, the helium-3 isotope in the moon's regolith -- the layer below its
surface level -- is particularly valuable. An isotope scarcely found on earth,
helium-3 could be used to generate energy through nuclear fusion without causing
waste.
But China's short-term goal is to carry out unmanned
probes and it will only consider carrying out manned lunar landing after its
manned space flight technology improves, Ouyang said.
He said that he and other scientists hope to witness lunar
missions before the end of this decade. Enditem
(China Daily)