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China Space

China Preparing To Send Crewed Shenzhou 11 To Tiangong 2 Space Station In 2016 54

MarkWhittington writes: China has not sent people into space since the mission of the Shenzhou 10 to the prototype space station Tiangong 1 in June 2013. Since then the Chinese have accomplished the landing of the Chang'e 3 on the lunar surface. According to a story in Space Daily, the hiatus in Chinese crewed spaceflight is about to end with the launch of the Tiangong-2 prototype space station in 2016 with the subsequent visit by a crew of Chinese astronauts on board the Shenzhou 11. The mission will be a prelude to the construction of a larger Chinese space station, slated to be completed by 2022.
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China Preparing To Send Crewed Shenzhou 11 To Tiangong 2 Space Station In 2016

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  • by karlandtanya ( 601084 ) on Wednesday September 02, 2015 @02:00PM (#50445857)

    Best yet, the Chinese are keeping their end up. So, you know...Firefly...

    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by Grishnakh ( 216268 )

      Not quite. In Firefly, both the Chinese faction and the American faction were strong in space exploration, so the two languages spoken in the new society after the migration were English and Chinese.

      In real life, what's going to happen is the Chinese will be the only ones strong in space exploration, while the Americans and their buddies sit around and bitch about how it's a waste of money and how the Moon landings never happened, and when it becomes clear the Earth-of-old is about to die (whether it's cli

      • In real life, what's going to happen is the Chinese will be the only ones strong in space exploration

        Given the glacial pace and lack of ambition the Chinese have displayed so far... whatever you're smoking in order to believe this has to be illegal.

        • by galabar ( 518411 )
          Not here in Washington State (we call it "New Amsterdam").
          • I live in WA, out on the peninsula, and I don't think any local store carries anything that strong. :)

        • If space launches weren't planned months and even years in advance, I actually suspect this is a grand ploy by the Party to divert the masses from the impending collapse of their economy. In a representative democracy they have things called elections.
      • by Anonymous Coward

        Not quite. In Firefly, both the Chinese faction and the American faction were strong in space exploration, so the two languages spoken in the new society after the migration were English and Chinese.

        In real life, what's going to happen is the Chinese will be the only ones strong in space exploration, while the Americans and their buddies sit around and bitch about how it's a waste of money and how the Moon landings never happened, and when it becomes clear the Earth-of-old is about to die (whether it's climate change or asteroid impact or whatever), the Chinese alone will create generation ships and seek out a new star system, while the rest of us perish as the planet becomes uninhabitable. So the society you saw in Firefly won't ever happen; it'll just be a Chinese-descended society in the new star system. It'll probably strongly resemble the Alliance, but without an actual "alliance" (it's just one power, no alliance necessary), and without any rebels.

        Ya sure, except that is stupid. Unless the Chinese become even more racist and xenophobic than they are now then there will be a gradual melding of cultures and genetics over time. By the time we have to worry about Earth being uninhabitable by any foreseeable demise, neither China nor America will be anything more than a distant memory like the Roman Empire or some remnant of what they are today. Sure if you froze societies in time in the near future it would be China and the US, with EU countries, Russ

      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        In real life, what's going to happen is the Chinese and the Russians will be the only ones strong in space exploration

        • In real life, what's going to happen is the Chinese and the Russians will be the only ones strong in space exploration

          In real life, we're going to go extinct soon.

      • what's going to happen is the Chinese will be the only ones strong in space exploration, while the Americans and their buddies sit

        Kickass acid, eh?

  • by xxxJonBoyxxx ( 565205 ) on Wednesday September 02, 2015 @02:09PM (#50445911)

    >> a larger Chinese space station, slated to be completed by 2022

    At least you know what kind of food they'll serve when you get there.

    • It won't be "Chinese food" if that's what you're thinking, it'll be actual Chinese food. The stuff they make for us Westerners isn't real Chinese food (and too bad too, the westernized stuff is great). Most westerners wouldn't care much for most authentic Chinese food.

      • >> It won't be "Chinese food" if that's what you're thinking, it'll be actual Chinese food.

        Yeesh, that's why it's a joke. "Chinese space station" means the work of an entire unified nation, while "Chinese food" both fails to describe the various cuisines available in China AND refers to the Westernized versions which assuredly WON'T be there.

        • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

          by Coren22 ( 1625475 )

          But, the real question remains unanswered. Will the astronauts be hungry a half hour later?

      • Or, as stated in the Seinfeld episode, "only over there they just call it food."

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        The main difference seems to be that the Chinese are not bothered by their food looking like an animal, where as westerners prefer it to be carefully prepared and processed. For example, Chinese people will happily have a whole fish on their plate and cut the meat out of it themselves as they eat. In the west people prefer the good meat to be cut out, covered in something and served up boneless.

        I'd just about okay with whole fish now, but I still can't eat shrimps.

  • China is really catching up in the Boredom Race. Come on, guys, go somewhere.
    • Either that or get to work on asteroid mining and get started on the O'niell Cylinders. That would be one way to fix the overpopulation problem in China.


  • Very shortsighted, and it will get expensive. When they return to Earth they'll want to go back in an hour
  • It's may be a prototype on the ground. When it's in space and working, it's just a space station.

    • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

      Prototypes often work perfectly well. In fact, if you've got any sense you make sure you've got a prototype that works before you start making non-prototypes.

      In this case, they're calling it a prototype because it's a little can that doesn't do much except serve as a docking target.

  • crowded is Shenzhou 11 going to be?
    Fell for this twice while browsing the stories today.
  • If there's a Chinese space station, she can use their Soyuz clone to get back to earth after the shuttle and the ISS is destroyed.

  • by devforhire ( 2658537 ) on Wednesday September 02, 2015 @03:25PM (#50446469)
    This is great news and I hope the Chinese are successful. I hope their space station is an improvement on the ISS so then the ISS can improve on that and vice-versa. We have touched space a few times (LOE is not really space, but the doorstep) but there are problems to be solved there before moving to space space.

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