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| Chinese astronauts Fei Junlong (L)
and Nie Haisheng wave flowers beside the re-entry capsule of China's
second manned spacecraft Shenzhou-6 at its landing site in Siziwang Banner
(County), north China's Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, early October
17, 2005. [Reuters] | BEIJING, Nov. 3 --
China plans to put three men into space within the next two years as it looks
ahead to an orbiting space station and a mission to the moon, the Reuters
reported.
China last month successfully completed its second
manned space mission aboard the Shenzhou VI, and is now developing a series of
new craft up to the Shenzhou X, two Beijing newspapers said.
The Shenzhou VII would carry three people and be
launched within the next two years, the Beijing Morning Post said.
But the Shenzhou VIII and IX would only carry
equipment for the planned orbiting space station, the newspaper said, quoting
chief rocket designer Liu Zhusheng.
Shenzhou X would carry the people who will work in
the space station, Liu told the newspaper, without giving a timeframe for its
launch.
But he said once the space station project got under
way, Shenzhou VIII, VI and X could be launched within a month of each other.
"Once one part has gone up, we need to immediately
send up the next bit to connect it, so we'll carry out a series of quick
launches in succession," Zhu said.
China is also designing a rocket that can carry a
payload of 25 tonnes into space, up from a present limit of eight tonnes, the
Beijing News said, though it would unlikely be ready for another six-and-a-half
years.
Another objective is to put a man on the moon, but
that plan could be complicated due to China's current inability to land and then
recover a craft from the surface, the report said.
"Though we have already achieved a high level of
successful technology, success does not necessarily mean the technology is
mature," the newspaper quoted another rocket designer, Yang Hong, as saying.
China put its first man in space aboard Shenzhou V in
October 2003, giving China membership in the exclusive club of countries that
have put a man into space.
The former Soviet Union and the United States first
sent men into orbit in 1961.
China has run its ambitious space programme on a
relative shoestring. State media has put the cost of developing the whole
Shenzhou programme at about $2.3 billion, a fraction of the $16 billion budget
of NASA, the US space agency, for 2005 alone.
(Source: China Daily/Reuters) |