BEIJING, March 6 (Xinhua) -- China has finished
assembling its first lunar satellite probe after three years of research and
development, Luan Enjie, chief commander of the country's lunar exploration
program, told Xinhua Tuesday.
"The carrier rocket, a Long March 3-A, which will be used to push the orbiter, Chang'e I, into the outer space,
is currently under testing," Luan said on the sidelines of the annual session of
the National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference
(CPPCC), China's top advisory body.
Luan said that almost 10,000 scientists, experts and
technicians have joined the program. "Starting from scratch, we developed the
Chang'e I lunar orbiter and the whole subsidiary project by ourselves within
three years," he said.
Another leading scientist, former commander-in-cheif
of the launch vehicle system of the country's manned space mission Huang
Chunping, told Xinhua early Tuesday that the Chang'e I will be launched later
this year. But no date was given for the flight.
The orbiter will provide 3D images of the moon's
surface, probe the distribution of 14 usable elements on the moon, study lunar
microwaves and estimate the thickness of the moon's soil.
Huang also said the country's new generation carrier
rocket, designed to launch a space station, will be ready in seven to eight
years.
The new generation large-scale carrier rocket is
likely to be named Long March 5 and its payload capacity can be increased from
nine tons to 25 tons, he said.
Design of the new generation carrier rocket's engines
has been completed. Researchers succeeded in the engine's first testing in
mid-2006, said Huang, also a member of the CPPCC National Committee.
Huang also told Xinhua that China's goal to land
spacemen on the moon can surely be achieved in 15 years.
China's moon exploration program will be carried out
in three stages. The orbiter will be followed by a remote-controlled lunar
rover. In the third phase, a module will drill out a chunk of the moon and bring
it back to earth.
Luan said China started a program of developing
large-scale carrier rocket last year. "China is expected to have 1,060 carrier
rockets after eight years. By then, the country's ability to launch satellites
will be greatly improved."
However, he said that the most difficult problem for
China to put astronauts on the moon is the low thrust of its rockets. "Moon
landing needs a rocket with 3,000 to 4,000 tons of thrust. But currently the
most powerful thrust carrier rocket is at around 600tons."