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China's Space Program, News & Views

This is a discussion on China's Space Program, News & Views within the Strategic Defense forums, part of the China Defense & Military category; Tiangong Orbit Change Signals Likely Date for Shenzhou 10 August 30, Tiangong 1's controllers raised its orbit by 11 kilometres, ...

  1. #1516
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    Re: China's Space Program, News & Views

    Tiangong Orbit Change Signals Likely Date for Shenzhou 10

    August 30, Tiangong 1's controllers raised its orbit by 11 kilometres, indicating that a target date for the Shenzhou 10 mission has probably been set. As August 30 dawned, Tiangong 1 was following a 344 x 356 kilometre orbit at 42.8 degrees inclination. Soon after noon UTC, a firing of its thrusters raised perigee to create a new apogee. The orbit became 355 x 366 kilometres at the same inclination as before.

    It was back to the same height that had been produced by a similar manoeuvre after Shenzhou 9 departed. Before this latest adustment, Tiangong's orbit decay would have brought it back to the 330 kilometer Shenzhou operating altitude before the end of 2012. Controllers had been experimenting for a few weeks with thruster firings to control Tiangong's rate of decay very precisely.


    It seemed to be heading for a rendezvous with Shenzhou 10 around November 26 during one of two launch windows covering the last few days of November and the first couple of weeks in December.

    It was probably a 'holding pattern' based on an estimate of how long it would take to review Shenzhou 9 and prepare a new vehicle for launch with a crew.

    Plans may now have firmed up a little with an aim to fly the mission early in the new year. Tiangong 1's new orbit will decay to Shenzhou altitude early February, during the next pair of launch windows that extend through January to mid-February. A current estimate of the likely Shenzhou launch date can be found here.

    Shenzhou 10's mission is unlikely exceed Shenzhou 9's by anything significant in duration.

    Where Shenzhou 9 was used to test and develop the logistics and mechanics of getting a crew aboard a space station, the next flight has the aim of introducing operational routines and simulating space station life.


    It is set to be the final mission to Tiangong 1 which will reach the end of its two year rated lifetime next October.

    Its docking unit is rated for use on six occasions, and four of them have already passed with two dockings each by Shenzhou 8 and Shenzhou 9.

    Tiangong 1 will then steer itself to a safe re-entry and China will turn its attention to Tiangong 2. The new laboratory will be used to build more experience of space station operation so China is ready for the challenge of operating the 20-tonne core module of a more-permanent outpost towards the end of the decade.
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    Re: China's Space Program, News & Views

    Space-age food served up with seeds of success

    An eggplant the size of a basketball, and a cucumber half a meter long seem, at first glance, out of this world.

    They are, literally. Chinese scientists have created more than 120 varieties of plants by sending seeds into space over the past 25 years. The varieties are making their way to dining tables and even grabbing a market share in some areas, industry insiders said.

    In Northwest China's Gansu province, "space peppers" account for more than half of the local capsicum market, said Li Qingsheng, director of the Lanzhou office of the Tianshui Shenzhou Lushui Agricultural Science and Technology Co, a seed firm in western China.

    "These 'space peppers' are not sold with a label indicating their uniqueness, but they still sell well at a slightly higher price than conventional ones," Li said.

    Farmers like to grow them because the particular type of pepper, the Hangjiao-5, grows faster, has a higher yield, and sells well, he said.

    Consumers like its thicker flesh and it has fewer seeds, he said.

    The planting area of the pepper, which used seeds developed from seeds taken into space during the 2002 Shenzhou III mission, has spread to five other provinces and regions, including the Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region and Yunnan and Qing-hai provinces.

    Peppers are not the only beneficiaries. Eggplants, tomatoes and beans, helped by space technology, have also entered the market. But ensuring seeds can fully benefit from their time in space means a lot of work must take place on the ground.

    "It's not like that after traveling in space for a few days, the seeds will turn out with all the desired traits we want," said Liu Min, a scientist who specializes in seed technology and is also a consultant to the China Academy of Space Technology.

    Breeders spend years working in the farmland, nurturing and selecting the prime seeds and just being in space is no guarantee of success.

    Liu's team sowed tomato seeds in 2005 presented by Russia as a gift. The results were mixed. They had been on the Mir space station for six years (1992-98). But the first seedlings produced both big and small tomatoes. Some did not even sprout.

    They selected the good but unwanted traits continued to emerge in the second and third generations. It was not until the fourth generation that the researchers were pretty sure that the traits were in the genes. A new variety usually takes at least four years to create but it is still a "much faster" process than traditional breeding which can take a lifetime to make just a few new varieties, she said.

    That is not fast enough as agriculture undergoes further modernization to feed a population of 1.3 billion, she said. "More than half of all vegetable seeds bought by farmers in China are imported. The situation is pressing," she said. Chinese scientists first sent crop seeds into space in a recoverable satellite in 1987.


    Jiang Xingcun, a scientist with the Chinese Academy of Sciences who was in charge of the early experiments, found that the space environment - which apart from the lack of gravity also has a magnetic field and high energy cosmic radiation - can induce mutations in up to 12 percent of the seeds, hundreds of times the rate on Earth.


    Scientists say the radiation and micro-gravity can cause natural changes to the seed. It does not involve any artificial genetic modification.

    Radiation-induced mutation is an agreed safe way to breed new crop varieties, given the fact that it does not splice any foreign genes into the plants, Liu said. A bigger percentage of mutations means breeders have a wider choice to find their desired traits.

    But the program has met opposition. Some agronomists questioned why China should experiment with space-induced mutation while the former Soviet Union and the United States have curtailed their programs.

    But Liu pointed out that Russia has been using space mutation to improve crops, including cotton, wheat and firs that are used as Christmas trees. US scientists have also used the method to improve roses so that more oil can be produced to make perfume, she said.

    "It's just one kind of radiation-induced mutation, except the radiation source is the high-energy particles in space," she said.

    Chinese breeders had used Cobalt-60, a radioactive isotope, to induce seed mutation on the ground. But Cobalt-60 is highly dangerous, and scientists must get permission to use it.

    Thanks to China's progress in space, seeds of nearly 400 plant varieties have gone into space 23 times in recoverable satellites and in 10 missions of China's manned space program, according to media reports.

    A news report by Nanfang Weekly in July said that there are at least 224 research teams in various scientific institutes in China, and at least 60 breeding bases have been established.

    Scientists are trying to unravel the mystery of space-induced mutation. Questions waiting to be answered include how exactly does space alter the genes. Liu Luxiang, a leading expert in the field at the Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences, said that only with the answers to those questions can scientists breed more crop varieties through simulated conditions in a shorter period.

    That is "the ultimate goal" of China's space breeding project.

    Liu Min said the country's future space station, which is scheduled to be assembled around 2020, will provide a platform to help scientists conduct experiments and discover the secrets of space-induced mutation
    .

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    Re: China's Space Program, News & Views

    A vid on the Compass System: dl.dropbox.com/u/102519027/BD_intro.wmv
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    Re: China's Space Program, News & Views

    Quote Originally Posted by escobar View Post
    But the program has met opposition. Some agronomists questioned why China should experiment with space-induced mutation while the former Soviet Union and the United States have curtailed their programs.
    Why is this a problem? It doesn't matter if US or Russia is not doing it, if it benefits the nation just go ahead and proceed, don't need to always look to the West.

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    Re: China's Space Program, News & Views

    Quote Originally Posted by escobar View Post
    A vid on the Compass System: dl.dropbox.com/u/102519027/BD_intro.wmv
    I heard you can send SMS by Compass, I hope my next phone would have it, it would be very helpful next time when I am in the wilderness exploring.
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  6. #1521
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    Re: China's Space Program, News & Views

    One of the two Compass MEO sat to be launched this month

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  7. #1522
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    Re: China's Space Program, News & Views

    Thermal testing of VRSS-1. Launch preparations has begun at JSLC.

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    Re: China's Space Program, News & Views

    China APMT to Launch 50 Miniaturized Satellites

    China Asia-Pacific Mobile Telecommunications Satellite Co., Ltd. (China APMT) has signed a QB50 Project Memorandum of Understanding with the von Karman Institute for Fluid Dynamics (VKI).

    According to the agreement, China APMT will launch 50 miniaturized satellites for VKI from 2014-15. It will also launch two regular satellites for the Belgium institute using its newly-developed launch vehicle in the next 10 years.

    China APMT is owned by the China Academy of Launch Vehicle Technology, which is attached to China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation.

    Jean Muylaert, director of VKI, said signing the agreement showed the world that any country or region can partner up with China in scientific space exploration.

    The QB50 Project, funded by the European Commission, deals with the design and the launch of a network of 50 miniaturized satellites to study the lower layers of the thermosphere/ionosphere.


    A number of world-renowned research institutes and universities have participated in the project, including China's Shanghai Jiao Tong University and the Northwestern Polytechnical University.

  9. #1524
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    Re: China's Space Program, News & Views

    The 702th institute has successfully developed a 70t electrodynamic vibration test system for LM-5. The system uses two 35-ton electric vibration table; utilize the multidimensional vibration control technology, complete sinusoidal vibration, random vibration and shock and other forms of test. The Institute has completed control of the key technologies of multi-NTU thrust shaking table test system to provide greater thrust, according to the different requirements of larger vibration test services: spacechina.com/n25/n144/n206/n214/c283695/content.html
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    Re: China's Space Program, News & Views

    A CCTV report entitled "The solid rocket propulsion, from defense to aerospace" shows the development of the LM-2F escape tower in particular the powder rockets. The first prototype came out in 1995, but the trial ended in a total failure. It is only four years later, the same year as the launch of SZ-1 that the test at 0m altitude was concluded.

    Last edited by escobar; 09-06-2012 at 10:58 AM.

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    Re: China's Space Program, News & Views

    CAST has completed a successful thermal test of a new swing nozzle engine making china the third country to master the advanced vector control technology for swing nozzle after the US and France: spacechina.com/n25/n144/n206/n214/c281755/content.html
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    Re: China's Space Program, News & Views

    Fengyun-2F satellite transferred to meteorological authority

    China's forecasts of severe weather conditions are set to be improved after the Fengyun-2F was officially transferred to the meteorological authority on Monday.

    The nation's fourth geostationary orbit weather satellite, has been operating smoothly during a test period, since it was launched on Jan. 13, 2012, from the Xichang Satellite Launch Center, in the southwestern province of Sichuan.

    A transfer ceremony of the satellite to the China Meteorological Administration (CMA) took place on Monday.

    With a life span of four years, the Fengyun-2F has higher accuracy and more flexible high-frequency measuring capabilities. The satellite is able to forecast a typhoon's position and intensity ten minutes earlier than current equipment, according to the CMA.

    The Fengyun-2F will form a network with Fengyun-2D and Fengyun-2E to improve weather monitoring.


    China announced its Fengyun-2 series project in 2001, which included the launch of three geostationary meteorological satellites, namely Fengyun-2C - China's first geostationary orbit weather satellite - Fengyun-2D and Fengyun-2E.

    Fengyun-2D is capable of carrying out infrared analysis on the structure of clouds and can also analyze data about visible daytime light. Fengyun-2E is mainly designed for gathering meteorological, marine and ground weather data.

    With the Fengyun-2 series and Fengyun-3 series, China is one of three countries and regions that has both GEO and polar-orbiting meteorological satellites.

  13. #1528
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    Re: China's Space Program, News & Views

    Nation to upgrade maritime satellite network by 2020

    China plans to launch eight satellites providing ocean and land data before 2020, a senior official said on Wednesday.

    "The planned satellite launches, including four satellites observing the color of the sea, two observing ocean currents and two maritime radar satellites before 2020, have been approved by the National Development and Reform Commission," Jiang Xingwei, director of the National Satellite Ocean Application Service, told China Daily at the third Digital Ocean Forum in Tianjin.

    The new satellites will greatly improve China's ability to observe and supervise the marine environment, he said.

    China already has three satellites that monitor its territorial waters and islands, including the Diaoyu Islands and Huangyan Island, but they cannot be used to focus on a fixed location, Jiang said.

    The launch of the two maritime radar satellites will add that capability.

    Pan Delu, of the State Oceanic Administration's Second Institute of Oceanography, said at the forum that it is urgent China moves forward with the satellite project because the country is at least 10 years behind the satellite technology of developed economies such as the United States.

    China is accelerating its pace of research and development of satellite technologies and broadening international cooperation.

    On Aug 30, China's National Satellite Ocean Application Service and the European Organisation for the Exploitation of Meteorological Satellites in Germany signed an agreement allowing the exchange of data from their ocean-monitoring satellites. Jiang said that a US organization has shown interest in the data from the Haiyang-2 satellite.

    China has three maritime satellites in operation, according to the NSOAS.

    Under the country's previous maritime satellite plan, published on the agency's website, three additional series of satellites will be launched: the ocean color (Haiyang-1) series, ocean current (Haiyang-2) series and maritime radar (Haiyang-3) series. Together, they will provide the capacity needed to fully monitor the country's ocean environment and guarantee its maritime rights.

    Satellite images and data have widely been used in marine environment monitoring and island protection.

    Xia Dengwen, deputy director of the China Oceanic Information Network of the State Oceanic Administration, said the current sea-monitoring is done by some satellites and aircraft.

    If more satellites are launched, the system will operate better, said Xia, who is in charge of the system.

    After three years of operation, the national sea-monitoring system has gradually expanded its coverage from offshore waters to distant areas, covering about 300,000 square kilometers of ocean
    , according to the State Oceanic Administration.

    Xia said satellite images and data provide important information used by China Marine Surveillance in monitoring the legitimate and illegal use of the oceans, helping authorities adjust the annual national sea-use plan.
    Last edited by escobar; 09-07-2012 at 10:06 AM.

  14. #1529
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    Re: China's Space Program, News & Views

    Quote Originally Posted by escobar View Post
    One of the two Compass MEO sat to be launched this month

    It must be really cold and sterile in that room.
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  15. #1530
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    Re: China's Space Program, News & Views

    China will develop the dark matter particle explorer (DAMPE) sat to help detect high-energy electrons and gamma rays, as well as a telescope to study the solar magnetic field and a Sino-French joint mission to study gamma ray bursts: cas.cn/Ne/CASE/201208/t20120822_90138.shtml
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