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A boy stands near a model of Shenzhou V launch
rocker at an exhibition about China's first successful manned space
mission in Beijing yesterday. China plans to launch another Shenzhou
within two years and eventually wants to send up a space
station.(AP)
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BEIJING, Oct 29 (Xinhuanet) -- China's next
manned space launch will carry three astronauts into orbit for a week, a
newspaper reported Tuesday, citing a space program official.
Plans call for the next launch within two years, the Chengdu Evening Post
said, citing Xu Dazhe, deputy general manager of the China Aerospace Technology
Group.
China's first manned space launch on October 15 carried astronaut Yang
Liwei's Shenzhou V capsule into orbit for a 14-orbit flight that lasted 21 1/2
hours.
Following Yang's return, space officials said the next Shenzhou launch
would take place within two years, but they didn't give a date or say how many
astronauts it would carry.
The space officials said China eventually wants to send up a permanently
manned space station, suggesting they already are at work on supporting space
crews for long periods.
In the CNS report on Saturday, the space program's deputy chief designer
was cited as saying the rocket that boosted Yang into orbit already is strong
enough to carry up to three astronauts.
Tens of thousands of young Chinese professionals working for China's manned
space project are becoming experienced and increasingly important for the
country's future in the space sector, senior space experts said.
Qi Faren, 70, chief designer of China's spacecraft, said a group of
well-educated young professionals with good managerial skills were trained
during the development of the vessel, which is more valuable than the successful
manned space mission itself.
China's first astronaut returned to the Earth on October 16 after orbiting
the planet 14 times in 21 1/2 hours, making China the third country capable of
independently putting a person into space.
Space officials and experts say thousands of young professionals tempered
in the 11-year-old project are an important human resource for China's future
space endeavors.
About 80 percent of the engineers and technicians working for the space
project are under 40, with some even under 30.
Liu Feng, 27, is the commander of the error inspection system for the
carrier rocket for the project while Qin Wenbo, vice-chief designer of the
spacecraft system, is only 37 years old.
The stars include rocket expert Zhang Qingwei, 42, deputy chief commander
of the space project; Yuan Jiajun, 41, chief commander of the spacecraft system
and president of the China Academy of Space Technology; and rocket expert Wu
Yansheng, 39, president of the China Academy of Launch Vehicle Technology.
At the age of 40, Zhang Qingwei was appointed in 2001 general manager of
China Aerospace Science and Technology Corp, which has 103,000 employees, and
develops the launch vehicle and spacecraft.
(Xinhua/AP)
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