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SHANGHAI, Aug.11, (Xinhuanet) -- Shenzhou V, due to
become China's first manned spaceship when it is launched this autumn, will be
fitted with an alarm system to avoid collisions in space, it was announced at
the second National Space Debris Workshop held in Shanghai at the weekend.
The alarm system will keep the spacecraft away from the
orbit of space debris by automatically changing its propulsion and speed, said
Professor Du Heng, chief scientist at the Centre for Space Science and Applied
Research under the Chinese Academy of Sciences.
To ensure the smooth launch and return of Shenzhou V, the
centre is keeping a close watch over the 9,131 trackable pieces of space debris
to screen those that are most likely to get in the way of the spaceship. They
are making calculations to a high degree of accuracy and then putting forward
suggestions as to how to avoid collisions.
Space experts at the weekend's workshop said an exact
launch date has not yet been decided because so many factors are involved, such
as the activities of the sun, the temperature, radiation, and the situation in
the ionosphere.
Space debris means artificial objects or fragments cast
off in the space, whether deliberately or unintentionally. With the development
of the space industry, the amount of debris has been increasing and now poses a
potential danger to spaceships, especially manned craft.
Since the former Soviet Union sent the first craft into
space in 1957, over 26,000 objects have been sent into space by humankind.
Now there are 9,131 trackable pieces of debris in
space,together with many smaller pieces, moving at great speed.
Li Benzhen - an official with the Commission of Science,
Technology and Industry for National Defence - said: "The research into space
debris that might fatally destroy manned spacecraft is greatly significant to
China, even though it did not start until 2000 and is very much behind that in
the United States and other countries."
The commission has over 30 million yuan (US$3.63 million)
in funding for the period between 2000 and 2005 to research how to minimize the
effects of space debris and develop protection against it. It is working to
improve observation methods, enhance studies into space debris environments and
set up a data bank to help China's space exploration.
Li said China has put into operation an optical telescope
with a diameter of 25 centimetres and will "soon" launch one with a diameter of
65 centimetres.
(China Daily, August 11, 2003)
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