Another Taikonaut Launch This Week 229
JPThorne writes "BBC Online is reporting that China will launch a manned space mission sometime between Wednesday and Sunday of this week. Two as yet unnamed Chinese Astronauts will undertake the mission." From the article: "The launch comes almost exactly two years after China's first manned space flight, which made astronaut Yang Liwei a national hero. Unlike the last mission, Xinhua said a live broadcast of the launch would be provided to foreign media. Analysts say the fact the authorities are being more open about this launch may indicate that they are more confident of its success. "
I swear (Score:5, Funny)
Re:I swear (Score:3, Funny)
Re:I swear (Score:2)
Re:I swear (Score:3, Interesting)
Cosmonaut
Taikonaut
Not knowing either Russion or Chinese, I have to ask why the need to change the first part of the term, but keep the last part of the term the same? Or is that actually what the Russians and Chinese call their astronauts?
OK, wikipedia gives some info. Still seems strange to me. At least the "Cosmonaut" is an anglicization of the Russian word ????????? (kosmonavt), makes sense.
It's just incredibly stupid. (Score:2)
Re:It's just incredibly stupid. (Score:2, Funny)
It's an 'enemy combatant' type of thing.
Re:I swear (Score:2)
It may indicate that and then again, it may not. Are you sure that you want to go out on a limb and actually commit yourself, your career, and your family's future to such a profoundly confrontational and opinionated statement?
Perhaps we should best call in another team of $200,000 a year analyists before we let something like this actually go
Wanna bet China reaches the moon before we go back (Score:5, Insightful)
Dontcha love partisan politics?
Re: (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Wanna bet China reaches the moon before we go b (Score:2, Interesting)
Amazing how even governments with philosophies as different as the US and China play the space card the same. Manned spaceflight is about giving the public something to cheer for - a human face on a program that is most efficiently done with robots loaded with tools that the average person doesn't understand.
Re:Wanna bet China reaches the moon before we go b (Score:4, Insightful)
The differences are with the ideologies. But ask yourself this: Do you own your ideology, or does it own you?
An alien visitor to earth would probably say "take me to your leading meme".
Re:Wanna bet China reaches the moon before we go b (Score:2)
The need for good propaganda, and being perceived as doing something, is not unique to idealogy.
The more you can get the people on your side, the more they go along with what you say.
Re:Wanna bet China reaches the moon before we go b (Score:5, Insightful)
Just like the US...
If we'd been interested in going to the moon for the sake of exploration and science instead of just getting there before the Russians did, we'd probably still be there.
Re:Wanna bet China reaches the moon before we go b (Score:2)
Or maybe we'd never have gotten there at all. Politicians aren't known for spending money for the sake of exploration and science, but since it was billed as a must to beat the damn dirty Reds to the moon, no cost was considered too high.
Personally I think it also had a lot to do with the fact of JFK being assassinated. Going to the moon w
Re:Wanna bet China reaches the moon before we go b (Score:5, Insightful)
Going to the Moon may be just a PR stunt (it pretty much was when the US did it), but the technologies and expertise gained from that are enormous, and China is taking its rightful place as the third space power. It's a few decades behind, but moving fast, and say what you like, the Kremlin and the White House will very much be watching when a Taikonaut steps off the land on to the surface of the Moon.
Re:Wanna bet China reaches the moon before we go b (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Wanna bet China reaches the moon before we go b (Score:2)
Dude, this is oversimplification. US (and Russia) spent billions if not trillions of dollars into space research, NASA will just handover the blueprint for a fee? Considering some of these research are confidental and maybe related to security to their country.
Re:Wanna bet China reaches the moon before we go b (Score:2)
Dude, it's called a military-industrial complex.
Re:My child doesn't know how to tie his shoes (Score:2)
Dude, that's exactly my point - advancement in science. I don't understand why people need to be so cynical about other countries space program. We do it here for the good of mankind, and they do it because it's a publicity stun, or for evil deeds. The original poster said this: Basically, it's pure politics and not science. ...been there, done that.
Re:Wanna bet China reaches the moon before we go b (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Wanna bet China reaches the moon before we go b (Score:3, Insightful)
Besides, such cooperation is quite easily shot down with accusations of such activities being "dangerous to national security".
Re:Wanna bet China reaches the moon before we go b (Score:2)
Re:Wanna bet China reaches the moon before we go b (Score:2)
IOW, we're technologically capable, just not politically capable/inclined.
Re:Wanna bet China reaches the moon before we go b (Score:2)
Why doesn't NASA cooperate with other countries in exploration, technology etc?
To some degree they do. The ISS is funded and developed by multiple countries. The Cassini-Huygens probe was a co-operation between NASA and the ESA.
Why not get Russia, China and even India involved in design a new space orbiter? When they share costs and brain power wouldn't it be cheaper and faster?
It likely would be cheaper, but the problem is how politicians view federal dollars being spent. If money isn't spent in someone
Re:Wanna bet China reaches the moon before we go b (Score:2)
Because the last time someone thought that, we ended up with the International Space Station. No thanks.
Seriously, having to deal with the red tape and bureaucracy of one nation's government, and making sure all the state constituencies get the proper allotment of pork-barrel spending, is enough. Problems tend to increase exponentially with the number of governments involved.
Re:Wanna bet China reaches the moon before we go b (Score:2)
Re:Wanna bet China reaches the moon before we go b (Score:2)
The US has enough problems of its own to take care of. Perhaps you have not noticed, but New Orleans is still a mess (though getting better it will take years to recover). Sure it would be nice to help everyone in trouble, but there is only so much that can be done - even when you are as large in the world as the US is, your abilities are limited.
Re:Wanna bet China reaches the moon before we go b (Score:2, Insightful)
But what saddens me most out of your post is that it shows a lack of vision. The universe is a place of nearly unlimited promise. Our solar system alone holds innumerable wonders. Why shouldn't we allocate the resources to go to the Moon, Mars and beyond? The side benefits that have come out of the space program in material technologies, medicine, computers and h
Re:Wanna bet China reaches the moon before we go b (Score:2)
Re:Wanna bet China reaches the moon before we go b (Score:2)
Re:Wanna bet China reaches the moon before we go b (Score:4, Informative)
Wanna bet China reaches the moon before we go back
Yes, I would. If China succeeds in there next mission they will equal the result of Gemini 4. That puts them only 40 years behind. Remember that they got a jump start too by buying Russion Soyuz spacecraft. Their booster is similar to a Proton. When China produces a real innovation I'll take notice. In the meantime they are also rans.
Meanwhile, back in the US, the Republicans claim they want to take us back to space but aren't willing to put their money where their mouth is (though they're quite happy to cut funding for robotic exploration in order to free up the funds!)
What??? NASA's budget continues to grow in real terms. Robotic exploration of the solar system has never been in better shape. You have the wildly successful Cassini. We have two excellent orbiters circling Mars with a 3rd more powerful one on the way. The Mars rovers are arguably the most successful robotic exploration mission in history! There is another huge rover headed there in 2009, a new Lunar Orbiter... What are you talking about?
and NASA's manned space division doesn't seem to be able to get its act together enough to actually give us a safer orbiter, never mind something that can take us to the Moon or Mars.
NASA has proposed a very workable and exciting exploration plan with the CEV. The major launch components are already there. Where is the risk in its design? NASA kept the wheels on the shuttle program admirably. Nobody can make it safe. The CEV goes back to what works. Real skepticism is healthy. Your nihilism is not.
Re:Wanna bet China reaches the moon before we go b (Score:2)
Right now, it would be my guess that China stands the best chance at a run for the moon. They are actively launching ships (slowly but actively). They are not tied to the ISS like we have left the Russians (because we can't get a
Re:Wanna bet China reaches the moon before we go b (Score:2)
The reason is simple: China is still many years from building a launch vehicle capable of flying a manned mission to the Moon. While the Americans can adapt Space Shuttle hardware for Moon missions, I don't know of any other nation that have the proven hardware to fly Moon missions.
The Chinese could ask for Russian help, but alas, the Energia launcher program was dismantled a long time ago and it's a major unknown how well can you assemble a spacecraft for a Moon mission wi
Re:Wanna bet China reaches the moon before we go b (Score:2)
Bullshit (sorry), spaceshuttle can only fly 300 kilometers high, nothing of that will aid in going to the moon, which btw is a thousand times farther...
cheers,
pol
Re:Wanna bet China reaches the moon before we go b (Score:2)
If you read NASA's web page on their future manned space program, they are adapting a lot of the launch hardware from the Space Shuttle program--though of course not the Space Shuttle itself--for the future missions.
Re:Wanna bet China reaches the moon before we go b (Score:2)
My bet is on China. Russia is currently the leading space power, but they lack money. China has money and will surpass the russians soon. The US is no longer in the game, because the US spends all it's resources on lawyers and internal politics.
cheers,
pol
Re:Wanna bet China reaches the moon before we go b (Score:2)
Speaking of Nazis.. (Score:2)
Re:Speaking of Nazis.. (Score:2)
OK, they had them designing missiles too, but if they'd been stuck in Nazi Germany they would've *only* worked on missiles, and if they'd been stu
Re:Wanna bet China reaches the moon before we go b (Score:2)
Wow, we see the Nazi Card [bbc.co.uk] already? I didn't even see trumps break!
What a horseload of false equivalency we have here - comparing America's current actions to those in WWII (a war which it mostly sat out while Nazi Germany rolled over Europe, and only joined after Japan forced our hand, by the way). Germany, a nation with several million men in its armed forces and among the best, if not the best, technology in the world, plus a massive industrial base. Compared to Iraqi insurgents, at 30-60k
Re:Wanna bet China reaches the moon before we go b (Score:2)
That's not such a simple issue [64.233.167.104]. There's correlation, but there's also correlation between peace and wealth of nations, their historic geographic isolation from one another, the rise of the cold war's stabilizing influence during the peak period of democritization, and a number of factors, suggesting that the correlation is not the causation.
track record of the USA is astrounding
On [navy.mil] what [huppi.com] count [daughtersoftiresias.org]?
Re:Wanna bet China reaches the moon before we go b (Score:2)
Re:Wanna bet China reaches the moon before we go b (Score:2)
Re:Wanna bet China reaches the moon before we go b (Score:2)
Re:Wanna bet China reaches the moon before we go b (Score:2)
On the one hand, they say Bush is a drooling moron who's led around by Cheney, Rove, or $RANDOM_EVIL_RETHUGLICAN. On the other hand, they say he (1) figured out how to collapse two skyscrapers and make it look like someone else did it, (2) figured out how to control the weather to get tsunamis and hurricanes to wreak havoc on people he
Re:Wanna bet China reaches the moon before we go b (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Wanna bet China reaches the moon before we go b (Score:2)
Absolute GDP values are worthless?
Yes, they are. How do people live in Bangladesh (GDP=275B$) compared to Luxembourg (GDP=27B$)? GDP is a worthless number on its own.
America has over 5 million people with at least a million bucks
7.5 million actually, as of 2004. Of course, the average American household had $84,454 in *debt* 2004, as well as $473,456 of government debt (their share). The b
Re:Wanna bet China reaches the moon before we go b (Score:2)
So I guess... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:So I guess... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:So I guess... (Score:2)
Re:So I guess... (Score:2)
Re:So I guess... (Score:2)
Don't forget, the Chinese have fixed the price of the yuan as compared to a dollar (there has been some movement over the past few months - but the fact is that the Yuan is much cheaper than it should be). That fixed price has resulted in a significant amount of economic displacement in the United States. The cost of manufacturing in China is much lower than it should be. This low cost is moving business from North America and putting it in Shanghai or other Chinese ciites.
One could argue that the loss
Re:So I guess... (Score:2)
Re:So I guess... (Score:2)
Re:US National Debt (Score:2)
So while China doesn't have the US exactly by the proverbial economic balls, it has a big chunk of it. Lets just say that it would be more likley that China could control the US policy by threat of economics than threat of force. Main reason why US would be
Re:So I guess... (Score:2)
I think that China will get ahead of the space race because of three reasons:
1. It wants to.
2. It is growing economically fast enough to have enough money to.
3. It has a lot more people, whose lives are not as "fragile" as American's.
By #3, I mean, since it is not a democracy, they are going to be able to more risk
China is a poor country... (Score:2)
But back to the point. China is still a poor country. While the lives of hundreds of millions of Chinese people have improved greatly over the last couple of decades, there are still large parts of China which are very poor. Nearly one-third of all children in some p
Re:China is a poor country... (Score:2)
Re:So I guess... (Score:2)
With apologies (Score:2, Funny)
A: In China tang in an astronaut.
Re:With apologies (Score:2)
Their space program is handled by their Navy?
This will certainly upset Bush! (Score:3, Funny)
Re:This will certainly upset Bush! (Score:2)
waiting for aussie to go into space (Score:4, Funny)
Re:waiting for aussie to go into space (Score:2)
Yes, but, can you sober them up long enough to get them into space? Maybe there should be a Scotland vs. Australia space race?
I volunteer to be Scotland's first astronaught. The challenge is keeping me away from alcohol for 3 days in a row and keeping me away from lardy food to make the weight for launch.
Re:waiting for aussie to go into space (Score:2)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andy_Thomas [wikipedia.org]
Or the great Canadian Space Program (Score:2)
* pronunciation is appropriate with our general Canadian approach to big science
** somewhere around Sudbury, I believe
Unified terminology (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Unified terminology (Score:2)
"Space Guy!" for the men and "Space Babe!" for the women.
There. You happy now?
I know I am.
Re:Unified terminology (Score:2)
Space Human In Transit (Score:2)
"Astronaut" is a stupid term since it means "star sailor."
Recently, the furthest anyone has been is less than about 300 miles above the earth's surface, hardly anywhere near the Moon let alone the Sun or any other star. Not only that, but to sail one requires air (or an atmosphere at least).
I for one, recommend the politically-correct and more accurate term Space Human In Transit or SHIT for short.
I hear that the Chinese are going to send a couple of SHITs into space tomorrow.
Well done.
Re:Space Human In Transit (Score:2)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solar_sail [wikipedia.org]
Biased Reporting - "Backward", Anti-Chinese (Score:5, Interesting)
Shenzhou VI, like Shenzhou V, is based on Russia's Soyuz spacecraft, a model developed in the late 1960s.
TFA (The F-ing Article) reads as if they are working with 1960-s era technology. I would suggest that this is biased reporting based on a premise that the Chinese technology is from the 1960's and they're using it now because that's the best they can do.
Instead, I would suggest that they are probably using a derivative of the Soyuz technology updated with modern materials and techniques. The U.S. is using Delta launch vehicles which had their roots in the 1960's as well, but we don't advertise that a rocket was a "Delta-IV, a model developed in the early 1960's" because most of the innards have been updated and redesigned with techniques and materials that are the latest in rocket design.
The Chinese program may not use as advanced a technology as the U.S. Delta and E.U.'s Ariane programs, but that doesn't mean the rocket was designed in the 1960's and they're stuck still using that level of ability.
Space reporting should not be politically biased.
Re:Biased Reporting - "Backward", Anti-Chinese (Score:2)
Space reporting should not be politically biased.
You've (mis)read too much into the article's use of the word "based". Sometimes a word means just what its suppose to mean. There's no shame in basing a design on an older one, especially if that original one was successful. It was obvious to me, w
Re:Biased Reporting - "Backward", Anti-Chinese (Score:2)
Original version: "Shenzhou VI, like Shenzhou V, is based on Russia's Soyuz spacecraft, a model developed in the late 1960s."
Alternatives:
* Shenzhou VI, like Shenzhou V, is a modern derivative of Russia's Soyuz spacecraft, a model undergoing refinement since the late 1960's.
* Shenzhou VI, like Shenzhou V, is based on Russia's Soyuz spacecraft, a modern derivative of a model originally d
Re:Biased Reporting - "Backward", Anti-Chinese (Score:2)
ISS docking prospects (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Biased Reporting - "Backward", Anti-Chinese (Score:5, Interesting)
Complete, relevent section of article reads:
Technical improvements:
Shenzhou VI, like Shenzhou V, is based on Russia's Soyuz spacecraft, a model developed in the late 1960s.
Liu Yu, commander in chief of the rocket system, said the rocket for Shenzhou VI was an improvement on the one used two years ago. "We have confidence in the quality of this rocket. We have the conditions and capability to fulfil this mission," Mr Liu told Xinhua.
Mr Yang's flight in 2003 made China only the third nation to put a human into space, after Russia and the United States. China has had a rocketry program since the 1950s, and Beijing fired its first satellite into orbit in 1970. China's space programme, which is closely linked to the military, is a matter of enormous national pride for the government. Chinese officials say they want to land an unmanned probe on the moon by 2010, and also build a space station.
I stand by my previous assessment. I acknowledge that some articles mention that Delta rockets are derived from 1950's American THOR IRBM military rockets (see: Delta_rocket on Wikipedia [wikipedia.org]). However, most mention that this has been significantly improved in the intervening decades. This article has a subtle bias that I want to highlight; the idea that the Chinese (and even Russian) Soyuz-derived rockets are somehow outdated, backward, stone-age 1960's-era technology compared to U.S. and E.U. models (like, laughably, the Space Shuttle, designed in the very early 1970's for quasi-military missions).
Admittedly, some of the Chinese technology might seem backward. In the 1980's, they lauched a probe that had to re-enter Earth's atmosphere and needed a heat shield. They researched a bunch of different high tech materials, testing ablating rates, weight, cost, heat transfer, etc., and finally settled on Oak. Yes, a wooden heat shield. It apparently ablated at a known and reliable rate, was a good heat insulator, and had many other benefits, the very least of which was cost. I recognize engineering genius in this decision, but the reporting on it laughed and laughed about the low-tech, backwards-assed Chinese program. I disrespect reporting that presumes that high tech requires high cost; I also disrespect reporting that pretends that basic designs originating in the 1960's but refined constantly since then are somehow less than state of the art.
In programming, it's "On the shoulders of giants we climb"; this is true of many engineering disciplines and I want to highlight the sometimes subtle bias in science reporting presuming all-new == much-better.
Re:Biased Reporting - "Backward", Anti-Chinese (Score:2)
Besides, how many articles have we read lately that decry the space shuttle as obsolete, 70's tech?
Re:Biased Reporting - "Backward", Anti-Chinese (Score:2)
good public motivation (Score:2, Insightful)
It good, however, for the general public to see this kind of headline. It reminds them that space exists and that the U.S. doesn't run the show up there anymore. Hopefully this leads to funding...
Re:good public motivation (Score:2)
Nor will your Great-great-great-great-great grandchildern.
57-60% change chinese on moon by 2020 (Score:2)
If the Chinese go to the moon, I don't think it will be just a publicity stunt-I expect they'll develop a real economic presence there. Stuff like a Lunar space elevator [wikipedia.org] could be a highly profitable enterprise.
This may be what is needed to show just how short-sighted the folks running the US these days really are.
Re:57-60% change chinese on moon by 2020 (Score:3, Interesting)
Please, explain the profitability. Where are they going to get the revenue that pays off the capital expenditure? A space elevator could perhaps be more cost-effective than an surface-launch based space program, but it's not even close to profitable.
If you believe that other governments (such a
From China's press... (Score:2)
Aww, and I was so looking forward to the catchphrases that would've spawned.
This will....... (Score:2)
Re:This will....... (Score:2)
It didn't catch on.
Taikonaut to confirm GreatWall is visible in Space (Score:3, Interesting)
this reminded me of the quote:
"That's no moon, its a space station."
Many insights to the moon could be gained from a new and sophistacated moon probe, I am not as sure about the benefits of the space station other than for scientific experiments and spacedocking practice.
The question now is: Should the US, Russia, EU, Japan and China all be obligated to share individual research and information acquired from each mission in the hopes to further the overall objective of creating reliable space travel?
Also, once some country lands on the moon, can they just claim it as territory and start building on it in any fashion?
The Ultimate (Score:2)
This is a good thing (Score:2)
Re:space pirates (Score:2, Interesting)
-Ming
Re:Arguably three entities have done it before (Score:2, Informative)
And, of course, despite all the hype the SpaceShipOne flight really wasn't comparable, being suborbital with no reasonable extension that would make it orbital.
Re:Arguably three entities have done it before (Score:3, Informative)
Check out America's Space Prize for something that might beat NASA back to indiginous American orbital flight. The current ASP award date beats the first manned CEV flight NASA is planning.
I'd really like to see a private, American effort beat everyone else
Re:Arguably three entities have done it before (Score:3, Informative)
See the word "another?" (Score:2)
" On October 15, 2003 Yang Liwei became China's first astronaut on the Shenzhou 5 spacecraft."
"Flight 15P of SpaceShipOne was the first privately-funded human spaceflight. It took place on June 21, 2004."
From the Wikipedia article, needless to say.
Re:To all those who followed up (Score:2)
Re:why the secrecy? (Score:2, Insightful)
A: It's China.
Really, what more information do you need?
Re:Taikonaut? Cosmonaut? (Score:2)
Or how about "explorers?" That seems to be a nice, gender- and nationality-free way of putting it.