Chinese Taikonauts Fei Junlong (R) and
Nie Haisheng (L) wave to the audience at an evening party of the summer
camp named ¡°China Root-Seeking Tour¡±in Beijing, China, July 19, 2006.
Nearly 5,000 foreign citizens of Chinese origin and citizens from China¡¯s
Hong Kong, Macao and Taiwan celebrated at the evening party with marvelous
performance. (Xinhua File Photo) Photo
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NANJING,
March 18 (Xinhua) -- The Purple Mountain Observatory under the Chinese Academy
of Sciences announced it has named two asteroids after Fei Junlong and Nie
Haisheng, two astronauts from China's second manned space mission in 2005.
According to Yang Jiexing, secretary of the asteroids
naming committee in the observatory, the naming decision has been approved by
the International Astronomical Union.
Yang said code names of the two asteroids,
respectively 9512 and 9517, coincide with the dates on which the Shenzhou VI was
launched and returned, according to a Nanjing-based newspaper.
The Shenzhou VI manned spaceship took off on Oct. 12,
2005, circled around Earth continuously for five days and returned on Oct. 17,
2005.
"It seems the two asteroids are waiting for the
Shenzhou VI to visit space," said Yang, quoted by the newspaper.
China started naming asteroids in 1979. The country's
first space astronaut Yang Liwei and "Shenzhou" have also been sharing names
with asteroids. Big names like Qian Xuesen, father of China's space and missile
industry, and Yang Zhenning, a Nobel-prize physicist, have also been used to
name asteroids in the space.
Shenzhou V, China's first manned spacecraft, blasted
off in October 2003, making China the third nation after the former Soviet Union
and the United States to send a human into space.
China's next manned space flight Shenzhou VII, the
third in its space program, is scheduled to take place in
2008.