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China to launch Chang'e-2 satellite at the end of 2010

It's very heartening to see China develop and prosper at such a magnificent pace. China is also to launch a Pakistani satellite. China Pakistan relations are historical. The defence cooperation speaks volumes. I hope that Pakistan takes a leaf out of China's book. China is a sincere friend of Pakistan and we can learn heaps from their experience. The room for cooperation in expanding trade and various other fields is astronomical. I feel that this has been neglected by the Pakistani leadership. I'm extremely proud for our friend China! :china:
 
It's very heartening to see China develop and prosper at such a magnificent pace. China is also to launch a Pakistani satellite. China Pakistan relations are historical. The defence cooperation speaks volumes. I hope that Pakistan takes a leaf out of China's book. China is a sincere friend of Pakistan and we can learn heaps from their experience. The room for cooperation in expanding trade and various other fields is astronomical. I feel that this has been neglected by the Pakistani leadership. I'm extremely proud for our friend China! :china:

We are brothers now, we will be brothers in the coming future.

Brothers will always be there for each other going through good and bad

time.

Chinese and Pakistanis=Brothers.::pakistan::cheers::china:
 
Change-2 Satellite's Camera Resolution Reaches One Meter

The "Lunar Probe Project" won a special award at the National Science and Technology Awards held during the China National Science and Technology Meeting January 11.

Ouyang Ziyuan, chief scientist of China's Lunar Probe Project disclosed during an interview that the resolution of the cameras mounted on the Chang'e-2 Satellite which has been scheduled to be launched this year reached 7 meters, and even 1 meter when the satellite is closer to the moon.

Chang'e-2 will be launched at the end of this year. Ouyang said that as an early guiding satellite of the Lunar Probe Project, Chang'e-2 has a key task of conducting various tests such as landing tests. It will experience many orbital changes and adjustments.

In addition, it will also carefully explore a landing zone enabling future satellites to land on the moon safely.

As for the upgrading of relevant instruments which will be mounted on the satellite, Ouyang said that the resolution of the cameras installed on Chang'e-2 has reached 7 meters, a notable improvement compared to the 120-meter resolution of the Chang'e-1 Satellite. He added that the accuracy can even reach 1 meter when the satellite is closer to the moon.

To date, the exact launch date of the Chang'e-3 Satellite has yet to be determined. Ouyang said that the landing of Chang'e-3 on the moon will need the cooperation of landers and lunar vehicles, which is the real key for the second phase of the Chang'e Lunar Exploration Program.

"Not only can China's spacecraft reach the moon, but it can also land on the moon, laying a solid foundation for future manned and sample return missions. The future work will be tougher," Ouyang added.

"How can we use resources on the moon to solve the energy crisis on the earth? This is just a topic that we are studying," Ouyang said. To date, China's "Lunar Probe Project" has explored that there is about 1 million tons of Helium-3 on the moon's surface that could meet mankind's energy demand.

Scientists have a responsibility to evaluate the outlook for future energy such as the utilization of nuclear energy. Ouyang said that there are only a little more than 10 tons of Helium-3 on the earth. On the moon however, as the moon's surface is being exposed to solar radiation, solar winds can always supply the moon with Helium-3 particles and store them on the surface.

Meeting China's power demand need only consume only 8 tons of Helium-3, equivalent to 220 million tons of oil or about 1 billion tons of coal. "Coal, oil, natural gas will all eventually be used up, so it is worth considering using the resources on the moon to support development on Earth. This still remains an ideal, and nuclear fusion power generation will not be commercialized for about another 50 years."

Source: Xinhua News Agency
 
China's Mystery Spacelab

by Morris Jones
Sydney, Australia (SPX) Jan 20, 2010
We could be less than a year away from the launch of Tiangong-1, China's first space laboratory. We've been expecting this launch for years, but relatively little is still known about this mission.

We have grown used to seeing computer-generated artwork of this small, stubby laboratory module, not much larger than the Shenzhou crew-carrying spacecraft that will dock with it. China Central Television has also broadcast short video clips showing the module undergoing assembly, and periodically, a short news report on the mission pops up in the Chinese media.

Beyond this, not much is really known about Tiangong. We don't even know if the launch will take place this year or in 2011. The Chinese themselves probably don't know for sure at this stage.

Tiangong doesn't have to meet any launch windows for reaching planets, so the Chinese can afford to take their time with the launch. As with any new spacecraft, there's probably a lot of debugging to perform, then more testing. It would not be surprising if the laboratory didn't take off before the end of 2010.

What do we know for sure? Tiangong seems to consist of a short, cylindrical pressurized module, with not much more internal volume for the crew than a Shenzhou spacecraft. To the rear of this is a service module, containing two solar panel wings, a propulsion system and other gear. The service module has a slightly smaller diameter than the pressurized module.

Tiangong also boasts a Russian-derived APAS-style docking system, with three guidance "petals" at its front to interlock with an identical docking collar. Artwork and video footage of Tiangong also reveals a cylindrical device pointing outwards from the rear of the pressurized module.

This is almost certainly some type of optical telescope, probably for an Earth observation camera. There is also a large parabolic dish antenna bolted to the side of the service module, presumably for communications with a satellite in geostationary orbit. China has already used such a satellite-to-satellite system to communicate with Shenzhou.

After several garbled Chinese media reports, China eventually confirmed that the next Shenzhou launch, Shenzhou 8, will be an unmanned flight sent to dock with Tiangong-1. Shenzhou 8 will carry an experiment package, including payloads from Germany. After an unspecified time, it will undock from Tiangong and return to Earth.

The primary purpose of this mission seems to be testing the rendezvous and docking procedures that will later be used to send astronauts to Tiangong. When Shenzhou 9 launches, it will carry three astronauts to dock with Tiangong and live aboard it.

Obviously, neither of the aforementioned Shenzhou missions can launch before Tiangong has flown. But we do not know when they will launch, or how long each flight will last. The requirements of each mission, however, give some insight into their lengths.

Shenzhou 8 has the potential to be a fairly long flight. It will not take long to verify the docking procedures. China may elect to perform several dockings and undockings over a few days. But the experiments carried on board could require longer flight times to be effective. Even the long-term operation of the Shenzhou spacecraft itself is an experiment.

China could want to demonstrate the longevity of the spacecraft for long-term missions and lifeboat service on future Chinese space stations. With no crew on board, engineers can afford to take greater risks. It's possible that the mission could last several weeks or even months!

China could elect to dock Shenzhou 8 to Tiangong, then generally power it down into "sleep" mode. During this time, telemetry and other functions could be performed by Tiangong. Then, Shenzhou could be awakened from hibernation before undocking and returning to Earth.

Is this a likely scenario? We don't really know, but we have no evidence to reject it.

Shenzhou 9 is likely to be a much shorter mission for a simple reason - logistics. Three astronauts will ride aboard this mission. The combined volume of Shenzhou and Tiangong could not accommodate the food, water and other supplies that would be needed for a long flight.

It seems possible to extend the mission for roughly two weeks, but going beyond this would be difficult.

This would still be a fairly long space mission, comparable to a contemporary Shuttle flight. It will provide ample opportunity for the astronauts to perform many tasks. What will they do?

Much of the time will probably be spent experimenting upon themselves, given the fact that these astronauts will spend longer in weightlessness than any Chinese astronauts before them.

There will also be ample use of the Earth observation camera system, for a variety of purposes. Some other experiments will also be carried, and the astronauts will also probably make television broadcasts back to Earth. Some experiments on board Tiangong will probably run automatically while the station is unoccupied. The astronauts may simply need to retrieve samples from them before they return.

It would be good to know more about Tiangong, and we should hopefully see more details emerge in the months ahead.

Dr Morris Jones has covered China's manned space program for more than a decade. He is the author of The New Moon Race, available from Rosenberg Publishing (Rosenberg Publishing).
 
Brother, no need to waste our time on a typical jealous Indian troll,

One need to take a look at the thread about Indians space

achivement "discovered water on moon" how Chinese members

congates their success, It fully show the difference between people

with a big heart, and a narrow-minded person.

Conclusion; he aint worth our breath.:cheers::china:

Yes,we don't need any one to believe,what we said is only after what we did.Indian don't believe anything because they are cheated much by their gov,they only believe after see video,how pity:hang2:
 
China Eyes Antarctica: Now Mapping Bottom of the World in Awesome Detail

Chinese scientists have shifted its focus from mapping the moon to completing the world's first land cover map of the Antarctica at the end of this year. The result will be the most accurate map of the continent ever published.

Using the application of high resolution remote sensing technology, the map will be the first ever to show the distribution of key features on the continent, including sea ice, snow, blue ice, rocks, soil marshes, lakes and ice crevasse. The map is also based on 1,073 images acquired from the U.S. satellite Land sat mainly during the austral summer from 1999 to 2002,according to Cheng Xiao, deputy dean of the College of Global Change and Earth System Science, Beijing Normal University, in an interview with Xinhua.

"The precision of the map is 15 meters, about 20 times of former Antarctic maps made by other countries," Cheng said. "It will greatly advance our geographic knowledge of the Antarctica."

The map will provide not only more accurate ground parameters for scientists to forecast global change or global warming with climate system models, but also important data for detection on the change of Antarctica land cover in a long run, Cheng said.

The 26th expedition team began its journey on Oct. 11 from Shanghai and sailed into Australia's Coral Sea on Sunday. A total of 251 scientists, workers and logistics staff joined the team for the half-year-long research expedition on the icebreaker. The scientists will stay on the icy continent until April 10 next year.

Casey Kazan

Source : China Eyes Antarctica: Now Mapping Bottom of the World in Awesome Detail

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Need a sticky thread to post Chinese space news.
 
I think it would be beneficial for China to have mature space station technologies in place first before they aim for the moon. What is the possibility of using rockets to sent modules needed for manned missions to moon (mars later?) to a space port where they can be assembled and launched under less gravity influence?

We can even have reusable traveling modules that dock with the station permanently and that way we only need to send astronauts, food/supplies and fuel from the ground (refueling in space). After the astronauts (Taikonauts? ) completed their missions they can re-dock with the station and travel back to earth in small heat-shielding capsule. There are a lot of possibilities in here to explore.

I think the chinese government might give this a serious thought as they like to be economical.

regards
 
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