China to launch most ambitious space mission yet

Crew will bring together two vessels in space, taking China a step nearer to setting up a space station.

BEIJING:
China is due to embark on its most ambitious space mission Saturday with the launch of a spacecraft that will propel three astronauts -- including the nation's first woman -- to the final frontier.

The Shenzhou-9 spacecraft is expected to take off on China's fourth manned space mission at 6:37pm (1037 GMT) from the remote Gobi desert in the nation's northwest, in a bid to achieve the first manual space docking high above Earth.

The crew will be headed by Jing Haipeng, a veteran astronaut who has gone to space twice already. Liu Wang, who has been in the space programme for 14 years, is in charge of manual docking manoeuvres.

Liu Yang, 33, meanwhile, who has created a stir in the media and online for becoming China's first woman to travel to space, will be conducting aerospace medical experiments and other space tests.

The mission will last 10 days, during which the crew will perform experiments and the manual space docking -- a highly technical procedure that brings two vessels together in high speed orbit.

Successful completion of the space rendezvous - which will see Shenzhou-9 attach itself to the Tiangong-1 module currently orbiting Earth - will take China one step nearer to setting up its own space station in 2020.

The Asian powerhouse last year achieved a similar docking, but the mission in November was unmanned and the procedure was conducted remotely from Earth.

"The manual space rendezvous... is a huge test for astronauts' ability to judge spatial position, eye-hand coordination and psychological abilities," Jing told reporters ahead of the launch.


He added that the three would work well together after months of intense training that saw them rehearse the mission some 16 hours a day.

"One glance, one facial expression, one movement... we understand each other thoroughly," he said.

The crew has rehearsed the procedure more than 1,500 times in simulations, Wu Ping, spokeswoman for China's manned space programme, told reporters.

But more than the upcoming challenge, it is the inclusion in the crew of Liu Yang - a trained pilot and major in the People's Liberation Army who began astronaut training two years ago - that has captivated Chinese people.

China sent its first person into space in 2003 and has since conducted several manned missions, the latest in 2008, but has never yet included a woman.

Liu's mission will make China the third country after the Soviet Union and United States to send a woman into space using its own technology.

China sees its space programme as a symbol of its global stature, growing technical expertise, and the Communist Party's success in turning around the fortunes of the once poverty-stricken nation.

A white paper released last December outlined China's long-term ambitions to "conduct studies on the preliminary plan for a human lunar landing".

The current programme aims to provide China with a space station in which a crew can live independently for several months, as at the old Russian Mir facility or the International Space Station.
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