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A helicopter carries the return capsule off the ground in Suining, Southwest Sichuan Province on Sept. 24, 2006. (Xinhua Photo) Photo Gallery >>> |
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A helicopter carries the return capsule off the ground in Suining, Southwest Sichuan Province on Sept. 24, 2006. (Xinhua Photo) Photo Gallery >>> |
CHENGDU, Sept. 24 (Xinhua) -- China's seed-breeding satellite,
Shijian-8, successfully landed in Sichuan Province, southwest China, at 10:43
a.m. Beijing time on Sunday after a 15-day flight in space.
The recoverable satellite was launched from the
Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center in the northwest China desert on Sept. 9.
The satellite's return capsule was recovered in
Suining, Sichuan Province. The orbital module will continue to orbit the earth
and carry out more experiments until its battery gives up the ghost.
The satellite carried 215 kilograms of seeds of
vegetables, fruits, grains and cotton, the largest payload of this kind since
1987.
Scientists from the Space-breeding Center of the
Chinese Academy of Agricultural Science used the mission to carry out
experiments aimed at discovering what happens to the germination and sprouting
of plants when they are exposed to zero gravity.
After being exposed to cosmic radiation and zero
gravity, some seeds may mutate and produce higher yields and improved quality
when planted back on earth, scientists said.
During its flight, the satellite sent back
high-definition digital images of sprouting vegetables, according to the
Institute of Plant Physiology & Ecology with the Shanghai Institute for
Biological Sciences under the Chinese Academy of Sciences, which is conducting
the experiment.
An official from the Ministry of Agriculture said the
ministry will ask research institutes to use the seeds returned from space to
develop new seeds featuring high yields, good quality and high efficiency.
Since 1987, China has carried out seed breeding tests
on nine satellites and a number of new species of plant seeds have been bred in
space by Chinese scientists.
Over the past four years, new types of crop developed
with space-bred seeds have been planted in a total of 567,000 hectares of
farmland, producing 340 million kilograms of grain and direct GDP of 500 million
yuan (62.5 million U.S. dollars).
The United States and Russia are also capable of
breeding seeds in space.
The Shijian-8 is the 90th space flight made by Long
March rockets and the 23rd time China has launched a recoverable satellite.
China has chalked up 48 successful space launches in a row since October 1996.
The Xi'an Satellite Control Center is responsible for
monitoring, controlling, and recovering the Shijian-8.
According to official sources, China's recoverable
satellites will compete on the international market.
China launched its first recoverable satellite for science and technological experiments in 1975. Enditem