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India’s manned space mission, not in near future … or never?

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Are you dumb or what this was the proposal by ISRO ,you need government approval & allocation of fund to do that which is not provided yet but will be in future, you talk like CNSA send man to space without money & approval of CCP ,ISRO main push is toward building better SLV to launch heavy satellite cheaply which they are doing as of yet

That is even dumber. You don't predict when your first son will be born if you are not even married.
 
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No Mars again! Every time, someone is critical about India for anything, you bring out Mars success. I have already congratulated you many times. Something new please, something complete in time as promised. :cheesy:

We launched our own multi-wavelength space observatory,two months back

inspection-of-astrosat-clean-room-prior-to-its-launch.jpg


Keep crying,kid...
 
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Read this,you patheic chini troll-bot

After the successful launch of 51 foreign satellites by Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO), agreements have now been signed with seven countries for launching 25 more foreign satellites during 2015-2017, the Lok Sabha was informed today.

No Mars again! Every time, someone is critical about India for anything, you bring out Mars success. I have already congratulated you many times. Something new please, something complete in time as promised. :cheesy:

This Time I'm not quoting Mars Mission kid.. Let see how your manned space mission fared.?
China's Spaceship Is Mainly Russian by Richard Ingham
china-first-reentry-capsule-bg.jpg
Paris (AFP) November 23, 1999 - Western experts are unimpressed by China's claims to have developed by itself the unmanned spaceship that took its maiden flight last weekend, saying the craft was born from a three-decade-old design bought from impoverished Russia.
Beijing trumpeted the 21-hour unmanned flight made by the Shenzhou ("Divine Vessel") spacecraft, aimed at making China the third country after the former Soviet Union and the United States to put a man in orbit.
An undated image from Chinese television footage shows a part of the experimental spacecraft at the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center in northwest China's Gansu Province. The space craft, named 'Shenzhou' by President Jiang Zemin, is part of China's manned space flight program and has completed a short mission in space touching down in Inner Mongolia 21 November 1999. CCTV/AFP Photo
The vehicle was "completely indigenous" and the mission "another milestone in China's astronautical history," the state-controlled media declared.
But analysts appraising official pictures of the mission say the ship seemed little more than a slightly modified version of the old Soviet workhorse of space, the Soyuz.
American experts in particular are convinced that China, seeking a technological short cut, simply handed over a fistful of dollars to Moscow, whose experience in manned missions stretches back to 1961.
"It is likely that the Russians provided complete Soyuz capsules, with Russian parachute, reaction control and soft landing systems," writes Mark Wade on the specialist website Encyclopaedia Astronautica.
"These were then outfitted with Chinese avionics and instruments. The landing systems are among the most difficult to develop and the Chinese would have saved much time and money by just adopting the Russian solution."
The Shenzhou is "a Soyuz to a very considerable extent. It's off the shelf, as it were," David Baker, editor of the British specialist publication Jane's Space Directory told AFP.
The capsule itself, as well as the launch escape system -- a rocket that wrenches the capsule free from the launcher and blasts it to safety if danger threatens during liftoff -- are "a total Soyuz lookalike," Baker said.
The collapse of the Soviet Union in December 1991 removed ideological barriers and provided a financial spur for Moscow or its "disenfranchised engineers" to sell coveted technology or skills to a former rival, he said.
The following year, the ground was laid for close cooperation when China's State Council directed that the country place a man in space by October 1999, in time for the 50th anniversary of the Communist revolution.
The US House of Representatives, in the so-called Cox Report earlier this year on the Chinese drive for technological prowess, said China purchased a number of Soyuz capsules during Russian President Boris Yeltsin's visit to Beijing in April 1996.
Phillip Clark, a British writer who specialises in Chinese space effort, offers a dissenting view, saying China had only acquired various pieces of equipment -- including a docking system, life-support system and pressure suit -- which it had copied, adapted or improved so that it would not have to "reinvent the wheel."
In addition, two of its astronauts had gone to Russia's Star City for space training, he said.
He added there appeared to be important differences between Shenzhou and Soyuz.
He estimated Shenzhou could weigh 8.5 tonnes, making it 1.5 tonnes heavier than the Soyuz, appeared to be built for up to four, rather than three astronauts, and the pictures showed it to be equipped with two sets of solar panels, rather than Soyuz' one, which could indicate a higher power requirement.
Experts struggled to understand why China should throw its resources into manned missions, a hugely costly business whose scientific or military benefits can be emulated by satellites, retrievable capsules or missiles.
"There are no sensible or logical reasons why China should need human space flight. It already has a very successful and innovative space programme," Baker said, pointing to the highly-regarded (and genuinely home-grown) Long March launcher.
Like nuclear weapons, a man in space is a "national virility symbol... that great big icon in the sky that nations find irresistible," he said.
Apart from prestige, the Shenzhou could be used to build a rival to the International Space Station (ISS) planned by western powers, Russia and Japan, some analysts said.
Alternatively, China could use the Shenzhou, if it is successful, as a bargaining counter to join the ISS as "an equal partner," a French space expert said.
 
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If Im not wrong here....since China sent man to space...with its superior technology...would have already sent a dozen space probes to mars by now?
No?

It is not in China's priority, and China did not big mouth about it.
 
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This Time I'm not quoting Mars Mission kid.. Let see how your manned space mission fared.?
China's Spaceship Is Mainly Russian by Richard Ingham
china-first-reentry-capsule-bg.jpg
Paris (AFP) November 23, 1999 - Western experts are unimpressed by China's claims to have developed by itself the unmanned spaceship that took its maiden flight last weekend, saying the craft was born from a three-decade-old design bought from impoverished Russia.
Beijing trumpeted the 21-hour unmanned flight made by the Shenzhou ("Divine Vessel") spacecraft, aimed at making China the third country after the former Soviet Union and the United States to put a man in orbit.
An undated image from Chinese television footage shows a part of the experimental spacecraft at the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center in northwest China's Gansu Province. The space craft, named 'Shenzhou' by President Jiang Zemin, is part of China's manned space flight program and has completed a short mission in space touching down in Inner Mongolia 21 November 1999. CCTV/AFP Photo
The vehicle was "completely indigenous" and the mission "another milestone in China's astronautical history," the state-controlled media declared.
But analysts appraising official pictures of the mission say the ship seemed little more than a slightly modified version of the old Soviet workhorse of space, the Soyuz.
American experts in particular are convinced that China, seeking a technological short cut, simply handed over a fistful of dollars to Moscow, whose experience in manned missions stretches back to 1961.
"It is likely that the Russians provided complete Soyuz capsules, with Russian parachute, reaction control and soft landing systems," writes Mark Wade on the specialist website Encyclopaedia Astronautica.
"These were then outfitted with Chinese avionics and instruments. The landing systems are among the most difficult to develop and the Chinese would have saved much time and money by just adopting the Russian solution."
The Shenzhou is "a Soyuz to a very considerable extent. It's off the shelf, as it were," David Baker, editor of the British specialist publication Jane's Space Directory told AFP.
The capsule itself, as well as the launch escape system -- a rocket that wrenches the capsule free from the launcher and blasts it to safety if danger threatens during liftoff -- are "a total Soyuz lookalike," Baker said.
The collapse of the Soviet Union in December 1991 removed ideological barriers and provided a financial spur for Moscow or its "disenfranchised engineers" to sell coveted technology or skills to a former rival, he said.
The following year, the ground was laid for close cooperation when China's State Council directed that the country place a man in space by October 1999, in time for the 50th anniversary of the Communist revolution.
The US House of Representatives, in the so-called Cox Report earlier this year on the Chinese drive for technological prowess, said China purchased a number of Soyuz capsules during Russian President Boris Yeltsin's visit to Beijing in April 1996.
Phillip Clark, a British writer who specialises in Chinese space effort, offers a dissenting view, saying China had only acquired various pieces of equipment -- including a docking system, life-support system and pressure suit -- which it had copied, adapted or improved so that it would not have to "reinvent the wheel."
In addition, two of its astronauts had gone to Russia's Star City for space training, he said.
He added there appeared to be important differences between Shenzhou and Soyuz.
He estimated Shenzhou could weigh 8.5 tonnes, making it 1.5 tonnes heavier than the Soyuz, appeared to be built for up to four, rather than three astronauts, and the pictures showed it to be equipped with two sets of solar panels, rather than Soyuz' one, which could indicate a higher power requirement.
Experts struggled to understand why China should throw its resources into manned missions, a hugely costly business whose scientific or military benefits can be emulated by satellites, retrievable capsules or missiles.
"There are no sensible or logical reasons why China should need human space flight. It already has a very successful and innovative space programme," Baker said, pointing to the highly-regarded (and genuinely home-grown) Long March launcher.
Like nuclear weapons, a man in space is a "national virility symbol... that great big icon in the sky that nations find irresistible," he said.
Apart from prestige, the Shenzhou could be used to build a rival to the International Space Station (ISS) planned by western powers, Russia and Japan, some analysts said.
Alternatively, China could use the Shenzhou, if it is successful, as a bargaining counter to join the ISS as "an equal partner," a French space expert said.


What you want to say? China has sent a dozen astronauts to the space already, and they have their own space lab. Try to beat that first, since you guys have announced your manned space plans again and again. :partay:
 
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It is not in China's priority, and China did not big mouth about it.
Oh right..Sending a Man which is 10 times more costlier than sending a Probe to Mars is a priority.. Is that what you are saying..? what did it got you ?? A moon walking Chinese astronaut in the space..???:chilli::chilli:

We do agree that we are behind Chinese in space research capapbilities, but the Gap is not as big as you guys think it is.. Because we do things in an orderly manner, step by step.. Not suddenly sending a man to space with an off the shelf purchased Russian capsule when you have no experience in sending a deep space satellite or a probe to another planet.. This tells us all we need to know about Chinese. You are desperate to catch up with West, which is clearly not our agenda..:cheesy::cheesy:
 
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It is not in China's priority, and China did not big mouth about it.
China was big mouthing about their space mission since Mao era ,but you were born after his genocide so I can understand ,China is still big mouthing about their military prows & just got humiliated by US in SCS few weeks ago :lol:
 
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Mars mission by 2013-2015, says ISRO


Yup, that's because you never know when you will be behind bars for opening your mouth.

You don't know, but we know all the plans. We do things quietly, bcs we don't have the big mouth. :cheesy:

China was big mouthing about their space mission since Mao era ,but you were born after his genocide so I can understand ,China is still big mouthing about their military prows & just got humiliated by US in SCS few weeks ago :lol:


What did he say about China's big space plan?
 
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