|
 |
| The rocket launch pad at the Jiuquan
Satellite Launch Center on the edge of the Gobi desert in Jiuquan. [AFP]
| BEIJING, Oct. 8 -- Unusually cold weather may
force China to postpone the launch of its second manned space mission, scheduled
for next week, the AFP reported, citing the Modern Bulletin newspaper.
The launch of the Shenzhou VI spacecraft from the
Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center on the edge of the Gobi desert has been
tentatively set for some time between Wednesday and Friday, the report said.
However, during those three days a cold current will
be affecting the area, the paper said, citing Yao Bingdao, deputy meteorologist
at the Jiuquan center.
"We're not very optimistic about the weather during
the launch period that was set initially," he told the paper.
The paper quoted unnamed officials as saying a delay
in the launch could not be ruled out, but that there could still be shifts in
the weather in the coming days making it possible to stick to the original
timetable.
The Shenzhou VI is now being prepared for its
mission, which will take two astronauts into orbit for five days.
It is China's second manned space mission, following
the Shenzhou V, which took astronaut Yang Liwei 14 times around the earth for a
21-hour period in October 2003.
Large parts of north China will see temperatures drop
by 10 degrees Celsius (18 degrees Fahrenheit) next week.
(Source: China Daily/AFP) |