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Shenzhou V Accomplished Every Experiment (16/10/2003)
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2004-05-14
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"Today, October 16, 2003, is a
day that every Chinese is proud of and is unforgettable. It
is in this day that we Chinese make our dream true to
accomplish the first manned space mission entirely relying
on ourselves," said Mr. Xie Mingbao, director of the
China Manned Space Engineering Office, at a press conference
organized by the State Council Information Office at 10:30
am on October 16.
On the morning of October 16
(Beijing time), the Chinese-made Shenzhou V spacecraft
successfully accomplished its mission including several
scientific experiments after orbiting the earth 14 times,
landing safely on the Amugulang grassland in Inner Mongolia
at 6:23 am.
The following is how its mission
was accomplished, step by step, as explained by Mr Xie at
the press conference:
Astronaut Yang Liwei was
finally chosen from a group of three about 16 hours before
the launch.
Two hours and 45 minutes before the
launch, Yang Liwei began putting on a special astronaut suit
for working and living in space and doing technical
preparation.
At 5:55 am on the morning of
October 15, Yang Liwei entered the
spacecraft.
587 seconds after lift off, the
spacecraft separated from the propelling rocket, ready to go
into orbit. This position was very close to the theoretical
designated orbital position.
Flying around the
earth by spacecraft needs about 90 minutes. While flying in
its fifth circle, Shenzhou V conducted an orbiting shift,
entering an oval orbit about 343 km away from the earth.
This was also very close with the designed point in
orbit.
During the orbiting of the spacecraft,
the ground command and control center kept close touch with
the astronaut. They got to know some feature parameters
including heart rate, blood pressure, respiration and body
temperature of the astronaut through remote monitoring
physical parameters, and observed activities, face
expressions and emotional changes of the astronaut through
the screen. Meanwhile, staff of the ground command and
control center and military leaders talked with the
astronaut many times. The astronaut kept close watch on
conditions of the spacecraft in implementing orders from the
ground as well as his personal work
state.
During the orbiting of the spacecraft,
the astronaut took many pictures of the Earth using a
digital camera and conducted extra orders under direction of
the ground command and control center.
When the
spacecraft was making its seventh circle round the Earth,
the astronaut displayed China's national flag as well as the
flag of the United Nations and completed other space
experiments.
From launch to return, the
astronaut stayed in space for a total of 21 hours and 23
minutes.
During its final orbiting, the land
control center sent return data to the spacecraft. When
flying over southwest Africa, the spacecraft began to
execute return programs. Its first movement was a 90-degree
turn to separate the orbital module. Its second movement was
another 90-degree turn to make the rear forward, start the
brake engine, slow down and descend in height. When
descending to 145 km probably over Pakistan, the spacecraft
separated its propulsion module.
When entering
the atmosphere at a height of 10 km, the spacecraft opened a
1,200-square-meter parachute. When being only 1 meter to the
ground, the spacecraft started four landing buffer engines
to land slowly like a hovercraft. The landing speed, about
2-3 meters per second like jumping from an elevated stand,
didn't hurt the astronaut at all. According to the report
from the landing area, the difference was only 4.8 km
between the theoretical and practical landing
points.
When the re-entry module landed, the
orbit module would still stay in orbit to conduct scientific
experiments.
Xie said, "We'll stick to the
three-step development strategy for manned space program
approved by the Chinese government 10 years
ago."
Following the successful mission of
Shenzhou V, the next objectives to be achieved include:
space walking, precise docking between spacecraft and orbit
module, and the establishment of
spacelab.
"The realization of these
objectives will promote China's manned space technology to a
higher level so as to make our due contributions to the
development and peaceful utilization of space," said
Xie.
(China.org.cn)
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