China Plans Space Mission in 10 Months
Posted on: Thursday, 20 January 2005, 15:45 CST
BEIJING (AP) -- China said Thursday that its second manned space mission will take place in September or October 2005 and will involve two astronauts orbiting for up to five days.
The Shenzhou 6 craft will have a flight of four to five days with two astronauts aboard, said Sun Laiyan, director of China National Space Administration, according to the official Xinhua News Agency.
The astronauts will carry out scientific tests while in orbit, Xinhua said.
The government said earlier it hoped to carry out the flight before the end of 2005.
In October 2003, China became the third nation to launch a human into space on its own, firing astronaut Yang Liwei into orbit. Yang circled the Earth 14 times and landed by parachute in China's northern grasslands after a 21 1/2-hour flight.
China attaches enormous national pride to its space program, and Yang has become a celebrity. Besides China, only Russia and the United States have sent humans into space on their own.
State media has said 14 astronauts - all military pilots - were in training for the flight.
Related Articles
- China Plans Second Manned Space Flight
- South Korea to Select Two Astronauts for 2007 Russian Space Flight
- China Begins Countdown for Next Manned Space Flight
- Taiwan Feels Heat from China Space Flight
- China's party daily hails success of manned space flight
- NASA Convinced China's Space Flights 'Non-Military'
- China Silent on First Manned Space Flight
- China Quiet on Manned Space Flight Plans
- China Guards Manned Space-Flight Plans
- China Bracing for 1st Manned Space Flight
User Comments (0)

RSS Feeds