New science lab for China’s space station launches on Long March 5B rocket
China’s heavy-lift Long March 5B rocket launched Sunday with the second major element of the Chinese Tiangong space station, sending the 25-ton Wentian science module on course for docking at the orbiting outpost.
The Wentian lab module was buttoned up in the nose cone of the Long March 5B rocket when it lifted off at 2:22:32 a.m. EDT (0622:32 GMT) Sunday from the Wenchang space center on Hainan Island, China’s southernmost province.
The launch marked the eighth flight of a Long March 5 rocket, the most powerful launcher in China’s inventory. It was the third flight of the Long March 5B configuration, which flies without an upper stage and is tailored to haul heavy payloads into low Earth orbit. The Long March 5B launcher’s lift capability to low Earth orbit is around 55,000 pounds, or 25 metric tons.
The 176-foot-tall (53.7-meter) Long March 5B rocket was loaded with kerosene fuel for its strap-on boosters and cryogenic liquid hydrogen fuel for its core stage in the final hours before liftoff Sunday. The boosters and core stage also consumed super-cold liquid oxygen in combination with the liquid fuel to power the Long March 5B off its seaside launch pad at Wenchang.
Gantry arms on the Long March 5B’s 300-foot-tall (92-meter) launch pad tower opened in the final phase of the countdown, clearing the way for the heavy-lifter to take off from Wenchang and head east over the South China Sea.
In the final seconds before liftoff, sparkers fired under the Long March 5B’s core stage to burn off any hydrogen gas that accumulated during the countdown. Then the core stage’s twin YF-77 hydrogen-fueled engines will flash to life, followed moments later by ignition of eight kerosene-fed YF-100 engines ignited on the rocket’s four strap-on boosters
The ten engines pushed the Long March 5B rocket into the sky with 2.4 million pounds of thrust.
The four boosters cut off and jettisoned about three minutes into the mission, and the core stage burned all its propellant about eight minutes after liftoff, before releasing the Wentian lab module for the rest of the journey to the Tiangong space station.
The Wentian module, measuring about 58.7 feet (17.9 meters) long, is fitted with mounting platforms to host science instruments and unpressurized experiments in the vacuum of space.
There are accommodations for life science and biological research racks inside the module’s pressurized volume, and the new module will add an airlock to support spacewalks outside the Tiangong space station.
The Wentian module, with a launch weight near 50,000 pounds (23 metric tons), will dock with the Tianhe core module on China’s Tiangong station in low Earth orbit later Sunday. Chinese astronauts Chen Dong, Liu Yang, and Cai Xuzhe living on the Tiangong complex will monitor Wentian’s arrival, then become the first crew members to float into the station’s new module.
The massive Wentian module will unfurl solar panels to a span of about 180 feet (55 meters) tip-to-tip to produce its own electricity.
The arrival of the Wentian science lab will add the second of three large pressurized modules needed to complete the initial construction of the Tiangong station. The Tianhe core module launched on a Long March 5B rocket in April 2021, and Chinese ground teams are preparing the Mengtian module for launch on a Long March 5B rocket in October.
The Wentian module carries a small robotic arm designed for more precise movements than the larger arm positioned outside the Tianhe core module. Wentian’s arm will primarily be used to transfer experiments and other hardware outside the station.
Wentian, which means “quest for the heavens,” will initially dock with an axial port on the Tianhe module, a docking mechanism that was recently cleared by the departure of a no-longer-needed Tianzhou cargo ship. Tianhe’s mechanical arm will move the module to its final position on the side of the space station’s core section.
The Mengtian module scheduled for launch later this year will arrive at the Tiangong space station in a similar way. Once Wentian and Mengtian are in their final positions, the Chinese station will have a distinctive “T” shape with its three main pressurized elements.
The crew on the complex will stage two or three spacewalks from the Wentian module in the next few months.
“The Wentian experimental cabin is mainly for space life science research, equipped with experimental cabinets such as life ecology, biotechnology, and variable gravity science,” said Lin Xiqiang, deputy director of the China Manned Space Agency, in a press briefing last month.
Wentian’s experiments will support research into genetics, aging, organs, tissues, and cells. The variable gravity experiment rack can generate accelerations between a hundredth the pull of Earth’s gravity up to 2g, supporting comparative studies under different gravity conditions, according to the China Manned Space Agency.
The design of the Long March 5B rocket used to launch the Wentian module means the launcher’s core stage entered orbit before releasing its payload.
The core stages on the previous Long March 5B missions in 2020 and 2021 re-entered the atmosphere about one-to-two weeks after launch. The Long March 5B’s core stage measures about 100 feet (30 meters) long and has an empty mass of about 23.8 tons (21.6 metric tons), making it one of the largest and most massive human-made objects to ever re-enter the atmosphere in an uncontrolled manner.
A similar uncontrolled re-entry is expected for the Long March 5B core stage after the launch of the Wentian space station module Sunday.
After the most recent Long March 5B launch and re-entry last year, NASA Administrator Bill Nelson said China was “failing to meet responsible standards regarding their space debris.”
“Spacefaring nations must minimize the risks to people and property on Earth of re-entries of space objects and maximize transparency regarding those operations,” Nelson said in a statement last year.
Wang Wenbin, a spokesperson for the Chinese Foreign Ministry, said in a press conference last year that it is “common practice” for upper stages of rockets to burn up while re-entering the atmosphere. He incorrectly referred to the Long March 5B rocket body as an upper stage, and said that “most of its parts will burn up upon re-entry, making the likelihood of damage to aviation or ground facilities and activities extremely low.”
But no other launcher in the world leaves such a massive component in orbit to fall back to Earth. Dead satellites and old rocket stages regularly re-enter the atmosphere, but re-entering objects with masses of more than a few tons are rare.
Larger booster and core stages used on other rockets typically fall back to Earth without reaching orbit, usually in areas downrange from the launch site that are clear of people.
Like most space junk that comes back into the atmosphere, much of the Long March 5B rocket burns up as temperatures reach thousands of degrees during re-entry. But some debris could reach Earth’s surface intact.
The risk of any of the rocket debris harming someone or damaging property is low, with objects most likely to fall into the ocean or in unpopulated areas. But the uncontrolled re-entry of the first Long March 5B core stage in 2020 spread debris over Ivory Coast. The Long March 5B re-entry last year occurred over the Indian Ocean.
The Chinese space station orbits about 236 miles (380 kilometers) above Earth, at an inclination of 41.5 degrees to the equator. The orbit means the spent Long March 5B core stage could come down anywhere between 41.5 degrees north and south latitude.
Quelle: SN
----
Update: 26.07.2022
.
China's Wentian lab module docks with Tianhe core module combination
Simulated image captured at Beijing Aerospace Control Center on July 25, 2022 shows that Wentian lab module carrying out rendezvous and docking with the front port of Tianhe core module combination. Wentian, the first lab module of China's space station, has successfully docked with the combination of the Tianhe core module, according to the China Manned Space Agency (CMSA). The Wentian module, launched on Sunday afternoon, docked with the front port of Tianhe at 3:13 a.m. Monday (Beijing Time), after it entered the planned orbit and completed state setting. The whole process took approximately 13 hours, the CMSA said. It is the first time that China's two 20-tonne-level spacecrafts conducted rendezvous and docking in orbit, and also the first time that space rendezvous and docking were carried out during the astronauts' in-orbit stay in the space station, the CMSA said. Later, the Shenzhou-14 astronauts will enter Wentian as scheduled, the CMSA said. (Xinhua/Guo Zhongzheng)
Wentian, the first lab module of China's space station, has successfully docked with the combination of the Tianhe core module, according to the China Manned Space Agency (CMSA).
The Wentian module, launched on Sunday afternoon, docked with the front port of Tianhe at 3:13 a.m. Monday (Beijing Time), after it entered the planned orbit and completed state setting.
The whole process took approximately 13 hours, the CMSA said.
It is the first time that China's two 20-tonne-level spacecrafts conducted rendezvous and docking in orbit, and also the first time that space rendezvous and docking were carried out during the astronauts' in-orbit stay in the space station, the CMSA said.
Later, the Shenzhou-14 astronauts will enter Wentian as scheduled, the CMSA said.
Screen image captured at Beijing Aerospace Control Center on July 25, 2022 shows Wentian lab module carrying out rendezvous and docking with the front port of Tianhe core module combination. Wentian, the first lab module of China's space station, has successfully docked with the combination of the Tianhe core module, according to the China Manned Space Agency (CMSA).
The Wentian module, launched on Sunday afternoon, docked with the front port of Tianhe at 3:13 a.m. Monday (Beijing Time), after it entered the planned orbit and completed state setting.
The whole process took approximately 13 hours, the CMSA said.
It is the first time that China's two 20-tonne-level spacecrafts conducted rendezvous and docking in orbit, and also the first time that space rendezvous and docking were carried out during the astronauts' in-orbit stay in the space station, the CMSA said.
Later, the Shenzhou-14 astronauts will enter Wentian as scheduled, the CMSA said. (Xinhua/Guo Zhongzheng)
Simulated image captured at Beijing Aerospace Control Center on July 25, 2022 shows Wentian lab module has successfully docked with the front port of Tianhe core module combination. Wentian, the first lab module of China's space station, has successfully docked with the combination of the Tianhe core module, according to the China Manned Space Agency (CMSA).
The Wentian module, launched on Sunday afternoon, docked with the front port of Tianhe at 3:13 a.m. Monday (Beijing Time), after it entered the planned orbit and completed state setting.
The whole process took approximately 13 hours, the CMSA said.
It is the first time that China's two 20-tonne-level spacecrafts conducted rendezvous and docking in orbit, and also the first time that space rendezvous and docking were carried out during the astronauts' in-orbit stay in the space station, the CMSA said.
Later, the Shenzhou-14 astronauts will enter Wentian as scheduled, the CMSA said. (Xinhua/Guo Zhongzheng)
Screen image captured at Beijing Aerospace Control Center on July 25, 2022 shows that Wentian lab module has successfully docked with the front port of Tianhe core module combination. Wentian, the first lab module of China's space station, has successfully docked with the combination of the Tianhe core module, according to the China Manned Space Agency (CMSA).
The Wentian module, launched on Sunday afternoon, docked with the front port of Tianhe at 3:13 a.m. Monday (Beijing Time), after it entered the planned orbit and completed state setting.
The whole process took approximately 13 hours, the CMSA said.
It is the first time that China's two 20-tonne-level spacecrafts conducted rendezvous and docking in orbit, and also the first time that space rendezvous and docking were carried out during the astronauts' in-orbit stay in the space station, the CMSA said.
Later, the Shenzhou-14 astronauts will enter Wentian as scheduled, the CMSA said. (Xinhua/Guo Zhongzheng)
Quelle: Xinhua
+++
Shenzhou-14 astronauts enter Wentian lab module
Screen image captured at Beijing Aerospace Control Center on July 25, 2022 shows Shenzhou-14 astronaut Chen Dong opening the hatch door of Wentian lab module. On Monday at 10:03 a.m. (Beijing Time), the Shenzhou-14 astronauts opened the hatch door of Wentian, the first lab module of China's space station, and entered the module, according to the China Manned Space Agency (CMSA). (Xinhua/Guo Zhongzheng)
On Monday at 10:03 a.m. (Beijing Time), the Shenzhou-14 astronauts opened the hatch door of Wentian, the first lab module of China's space station, and entered the module, according to the China Manned Space Agency (CMSA).
It was the first time the Chinese astronauts had entered the lab module in orbit.
The Wentian module, launched on Sunday afternoon, docked with the front port of the Tianhe core module at 3:13 a.m. Monday.
The astronauts will conduct in-orbit work such as the attitude control of the combination of the space station, small mechanical arm crawling and the test of the complex of big and small arms.
They will also use the airlock cabin and the small mechanical arm of Wentian to carry out extravehicular activities.
Screen image captured at Beijing Aerospace Control Center on July 25, 2022 shows Shenzhou-14 astronaut Chen Dong opening the hatch door of Wentian lab module. On Monday at 10:03 a.m. (Beijing Time), the Shenzhou-14 astronauts opened the hatch door of Wentian, the first lab module of China's space station, and entered the module, according to the China Manned Space Agency (CMSA). (Xinhua/Guo Zhongzheng)
Screen image captured at Beijing Aerospace Control Center on July 25, 2022 shows Shenzhou-14 astronaut Chen Dong at Wentian lab module. On Monday at 10:03 a.m. (Beijing Time), the Shenzhou-14 astronauts opened the hatch door of Wentian, the first lab module of China's space station, and entered the module, according to the China Manned Space Agency (CMSA). (Xinhua/Guo Zhongzheng)
Screen image captured at Beijing Aerospace Control Center on July 25, 2022 shows Shenzhou-14 astronaut Chen Dong at Wentian lab module. On Monday at 10:03 a.m. (Beijing Time), the Shenzhou-14 astronauts opened the hatch door of Wentian, the first lab module of China's space station, and entered the module, according to the China Manned Space Agency (CMSA). (Xinhua/Guo Zhongzheng)
Screen image captured at Beijing Aerospace Control Center on July 25, 2022 shows Shenzhou-14 astronauts Chen Dong (C), Liu Yang (R) and Cai Xuzhe at Wentian lab module. On Monday at 10:03 a.m. (Beijing Time), the Shenzhou-14 astronauts opened the hatch door of Wentian, the first lab module of China's space station, and entered the module, according to the China Manned Space Agency (CMSA). (Xinhua/Guo Zhongzheng)
Quelle: Xinhua
----
Update: 10.08.2022
.
Chinese astronauts start testing new space station module
The Shenzhou 14 crew is getting to know Wentian.
China's Shenzhou 14 mission astronauts are getting the country's new space station module ready to host crews over the next decade.
Wentian launched on July 24 and docked with the Tianhe core module hours later, expanding China's Tiangong space station to two modules.
SInce then, the Shenzhou 14 crew — Chen Dong, Cai Xuzhe and Liu Yang — have been busy getting Wentian into working order, testing out the module's 19.6-foot-long (6 meters) robotic arm and installing a regenerative life support system.
Astronaut Cai has enjoyed more personal space recently by testing out Wentian's new sleeping quarters, while his crewmates sleep back in Tianhe.
The added crew facilities in Wentian allow the orbiting complex to temporarily accommodate six astronauts, meaning that the Shenzhou 14 and Shenzhou 15 crews will be able to conduct China's first crew handover later this year.
The robotic arm, a smaller but more dextrous version of the 33.5-foot-long (10.2 m) arm launched with Tianhe, will be used for maintaining and repairing the exterior of the space station, but will also support spacewalks conducted by astronauts.
"Last week, the astronauts used the in-orbit training software and training platform to test the small mechanical arm," Wang Chunhui, deputy chief designer of the astronaut system of the China Astronaut Research and Training Center, told Central China Television (CCTV).
"During the spacewalk, we can see that the third astronaut is manipulating the mechanical arm in the cabin to support the work of the other two outside," Wang added.
Next up, the Shenzhou 14 astronauts will be testing the complex regenerative life support system installed in early August. Wang stated that the system involves extensive plumbing operations, requiring a range of tests and adjustments and installation of instruments.
The crew are also expected to conduct a spacewalk using the Wentian hatch and host a livestreamed science lecture from the new module after testing is completed. Wentian also contains a range of science cabinets for carrying various experiments in low Earth orbit.
Quelle: SC
+++
China's space station lab module Mengtian arrives at launch site
Mengtian, the second lab module of China's space station, has been shipped to the launch site in the southern island province of Hainan, the China Manned Space Agency said Tuesday.
The lab module will be assembled and tested as planned at the Wenchang Spacecraft Launch Site, said the agency.
The facilities and equipment at the launch site are in good condition. All the systems involved in the mission are undergoing orderly preparations, said the agency.
Quelle: Xinhua
----
Update: 16.08.2022
.
Shenzhou XIV astronauts to conduct their first spacewalk in coming days
China's Shenzhou XIV astronauts will conduct extravehicular activities (EVAs) for the first time in the next few days, China Media Group reported on Saturday.
The three-member crew has been working and living in orbit for 70 days since they were sent into space onboard the Shenzhou XIV spaceship and entered China's space station.
The combination of China's space station is currently formed by the Tianhe core module, the Wentian lab module, the Shenzhou XIV spaceship and the Tianzhou 4 cargo craft.
The Shenzhou XIV astronauts will venture out of the airlock cabin of the Wentian lab module for the first time, while their predecessors, Shenzhou XIII and Shenzhou XII crew members, all exited from the Tianhe core module.
Quelle: SD
----
Update: 27.08.2022
.
See amazing views of China's space station from its big robotic arm (video
The inspection work is part of preparations to move the new Wentian module to a side docking port.
New footage from China’s space station shows incredible images of Earth as a robotic arm inspects the exterior of the new orbital outpost.
The Tiangong space station currently consists of two modules. The 33-foot-long (10 meters) robotic arm that launched with the Tianhe core module in April 2021 carries a camera that allows it to scan and examine the outside of the station. This includes the new Wentian module, which joined Tianhe in orbit in July of this year.
The new video released this week by China's human spaceflight agency provides various views of the large solar arrays that provide power for Tiangong. Visible features include the orb-like control moment gyroscopes that control the station’s attitude, or orientation, as it orbits Earth.
Seas and clouds can be seen on Earth roughly 236 miles (380 kilometers) below Tiangong. The Shenzhou 14 spacecraft, which carried the current Tiangong crew of Chen Dong, Liu Yang and Cai Xuzhe to orbit, is also visible at times.
The inspection work provided a status update of the station and delivered some impressive views. But it also served to confirm that the new Wentian module is ready to move from the forward port on the space station’s docking hub to a lateral port, to which Wentian will be permanently docked.
Wentian will be moved to its assigned docking port before the launch of the third and final module, Mengtian, which is scheduled for October.
Together, Tianhe, Wentian and Mengtian will complete the T-shaped Tiangong space station, which China aims to operate for at least 10 years.
Quelle: space.com
----
Update: 29.08.2022
.
Energy particle detector helps Shenzhou-14 crew conduct EVAs
The energy particle detector deployed on Wentian, the first lab module of China's space station, will help the Shenzhou-14 crew members carry out extravehicular activities (EVAs), according to the China Manned Space Agency (CMSA).
The Wentian module has been operating stably in orbit for nearly a month, and the Shenzhou-14 crew have been training and preparing for their first EVAs during the mission.
Particle radiation is a key threat to the safety of spacecraft and astronauts. The energy particle detector deployed on Wentian can help astronauts choose the time of their EVAs to ensure safety in the high-radiation environment.
The detector is mainly used to measure the energy, direction and flux of various particles in the orbit of the space station, including high-energy protons, electrons, heavy ions and neutrons, so as to provide key reference data for astronaut EVAs, space materials, biological experiments, and the safety of the space station.
It has four detection modules, which can detect various types of particles and a wide energy spectrum range, according to the CMSA.
The detector's accurate and quantitative measurement of the spatial and temporal distribution of particle radiation can provide first-hand data for astronauts to choose the time window for EVAs.
Particle radiation is also an important threat to spacecraft in orbit. Statistics show that more than 40 percent of spacecraft faults are caused by particle radiation.
Accurate particle radiation detection is a key parameter for the space station's in-orbit risk avoidance, fault location and recovery, and the life evaluation and replacement of key components, according to the CMSA.
One of the important missions of the space station is to provide a platform for new-material experiments and biological experiments. Accurate particle detection will provide key research parameters for these experiments, because particle radiation is a key environmental factor in the difference between outer space and the Earth's surface.
China on July 24 launched the Wentian lab module, which consists of a work cabin, an airlock cabin and a resource cabin. It functions both as a backup of the core module and as a powerful scientific experiment platform.
Quelle: SD
----
Update: 3.09.2022
.
China's Shenzhou-14 astronauts complete first extravehicular activities
Screen image captured at Beijing Aerospace Control Center on Sept. 2, 2022 shows China's Shenzhou-14 astronaut Chen Dong closing the hatch of space station lab module Wentian's airlock cabin after completing extravehicular activities (EVAs). China's astronauts Chen Dong and Liu Yang have completed their EVAs and returned to the space station lab module Wentian, the China Manned Space Agency (CMSA) said on early hours of Friday. (Photo by Li Jie/Xinhua
China's astronauts Chen Dong and Liu Yang have completed their extravehicular activities (EVAs) and returned to the space station lab module Wentian, the China Manned Space Agency (CMSA) said on early hours of Friday.
This was the first time Chinese astronauts have used Wentian's airlock cabin, aided by its small mechanical arm, to carry out EVAs, said the CMSA, who has declared Friday's mission a complete success.
The pair returned to the lab module at 0:33 a.m. (Beijing Time) after about six hours of EVAs, according to the CMSA.
Under the coordination between space and Earth, and coordination with astronaut Cai Xuzhe inside the lab module, the pair completed a series of tasks, including the installation of the extended pump set of the Wentian lab module, lifting the lab module's panoramic camera, and the verification of capability for independent transfer and emergency return to the spacecraft.
The EVAs tested the cooperation ability between astronauts and the small mechanical arm, and tested the function and performance of Wentian's airlock cabin and support equipment related to EVAs, the CMSA said.
China launched the Shenzhou-14 spaceship on June 5, sending three astronauts to its space station combination for a six-month mission. ■
Screen image captured at Beijing Aerospace Control Center on Sept. 2, 2022 shows China's Shenzhou-14 astronaut Liu Yang (L) returning to the space station lab module Wentian after completing extravehicular activities (EVAs). China's astronauts Chen Dong and Liu Yang have completed their EVAs and returned to the space station lab module Wentian, the China Manned Space Agency (CMSA) said on early hours of Friday.
The pair returned to the lab module at 0:33 a.m. (Beijing Time) after about six hours of EVAs, according to the CMSA.
Under the coordination between space and Earth, and coordination with astronaut Cai Xuzhe inside the lab module, the pair completed a series of tasks, including the installation of the extended pump set of the Wentian lab module, lifting the lab module's panoramic camera, and the verification of capability for independent transfer and emergency return to the spacecraft. (Photo by Li Jie/Xinhua)
Screen image captured at Beijing Aerospace Control Center on Sept. 2, 2022 shows China's Shenzhou-14 astronaut Chen Dong returning to the space station lab module Wentian after completing extravehicular activities (EVAs). China's astronauts Chen Dong and Liu Yang have completed their EVAs and returned to the space station lab module Wentian, the China Manned Space Agency (CMSA) said on early hours of Friday.
The pair returned to the lab module at 0:33 a.m. (Beijing Time) after about six hours of EVAs, according to the CMSA.
Under the coordination between space and Earth, and coordination with astronaut Cai Xuzhe inside the lab module, the pair completed a series of tasks, including the installation of the extended pump set of the Wentian lab module, lifting the lab module's panoramic camera, and the verification of capability for independent transfer and emergency return to the spacecraft. (Photo by Li Jie/Xinhua)
Screen image captured at Beijing Aerospace Control Center on Sept. 2, 2022 shows China's Shenzhou-14 astronauts Chen Dong (R) and Liu Yang waving before returning to the space station lab module Wentian after completing extravehicular activities (EVAs). China's astronauts Chen Dong and Liu Yang have completed their EVAs and returned to the space station lab module Wentian, the China Manned Space Agency (CMSA) said on early hours of Friday.
The pair returned to the lab module at 0:33 a.m. (Beijing Time) after about six hours of EVAs, according to the CMSA.
Under the coordination between space and Earth, and coordination with astronaut Cai Xuzhe inside the lab module, the pair completed a series of tasks, including the installation of the extended pump set of the Wentian lab module, lifting the lab module's panoramic camera, and the verification of capability for independent transfer and emergency return to the spacecraft. (Photo by Li Jie/Xinhua)
Quelle: Xinhua
----
Update: 4.09.2022
.
Rocket to carry Mengtian space lab module arrives at launch site
A Long March-5B Y4 rocket, tasked with sending China's space station lab module Mengtian into orbit, has been transported to the Wenchang Spacecraft Launch Site in the southern province of Hainan, the China Manned Space Agency said Saturday.
The rocket will undergo final assembly and testing together with the Mengtian lab module, which arrived earlier.
Preparations for the launch mission scheduled for October are underway at the launch area, according to the space agency.
At present, China's Tiangong space station complex is composed of the Tianhe core module, the Wentian lab module, the Tianzhou-4 cargo vessel and the Shenzhou-14 crewed spaceship.
Mengtian is the second lab module of the under-construction space station. Scientific equipment in the lab will be used for studying microgravity and carrying out experiments in fluid physics, materials science, combustion science and fundamental physics, designers said.
Quelle: Xinhua
----
Update: 5.09.2022
.
Long March 5B rocket arrives at Wenchang spaceport for Mengtian space station lab module October launch
The Long March-5B Y4 carrier rocket that is commissioned to ferry the China Space Station Mengtian laboratory module into orbit, has safely arrived at the Wenchang Space Launch Site in South China's Hainan Province, the Global Times learned from the China Manned Space Agency (CMSA) on Saturday morning. Next, the Long March-5B Y4 rocket will carry out general assembly work at the launch pad and other testing work together with the Mengtian module that arrived earlier, the CMSA said in a press release it provided to the Global Times on Saturday. China is gearing up smoothly to complete the building of the country's first space station with the Mengtian - third and last part for the basic three-module T structure and the second lab module following Wentian module - to be launched and connected to the current space station combination in October. Compared with the Wentian module that was launched in July and hosting experiments with focus on the study of space life sciences, the Mengtian module will be oriented to microgravity scientific research and is equipped with experimental cabinets for fluid physics, materials science, combustion science, basic physics and space technology experiments. Mengtian also has a payload airlock, allowing the station's small robotic arm to take science payloads and install them on an experiment platform on the module's exterior. Zhang Wei, director of the Space Utilization Development Center, Technology and Engineering Center for Space Utilization, under the Chinese Academy of Sciences, revealed previously that Mengtian will carry the world's first space-based cold atomic clock system consisting of a hydrogen clock, a rubidium clock and an optical clock. "If successful, the cold atomic clocks will form the most precise time and frequency system in space, which should not lose one second in hundreds of millions of years," said Zhang. Then Shenzhou-14 spaceflight crew led by mission commander Chen Dong are currently in a six-month mission, working and living in orbit in the space station combination. The crew delivered their first spacewalk with full success at 0:33 am on Friday, the mission lasted some six hours. Before Mengtian is launched and connected to the combination, the Wentian module will move to the right side of the Tianhe core module, forming an L-shaped structure, for which Shenzhou-14 taikonauts will perform three complex steering maneuvers to adjust the Wentian to a vertical position with the help of the robotic arm, the Global Times learned from manned space authorities.
Quelle: Global Times
----
Update: 6.09.2022
.
China begins launch campaign for final space station module
The 30-meter-long core stage of the fourth Long March 5B arrives at Wenchang spaceport in September 2022. Credit: CMSA
HELSINKI — Work to assemble a Long March 5B heavy-lift rocket is underway at Wenchang spaceport as China prepares to complete the construction of its Tiangong space station.
Components of the 849-metric-ton Long March 5B rocket were recently delivered to Wenchang, the China Manned Space Agency (CMSA) announced Sept. 3.
The rocket is now being prepared for an early October launch of the 17.9-meter-long, 4.2-meter-diameter and 22-ton Mengtian (“dreaming of the heavens”) experiment module.
Mengtian will join two earlier modules—the Tianhe core module and Wentian experiment module—in orbit to complete the T-shaped Tiangong space station.
China intends to keep the space station permanently inhabited for at least a decade, gaining human spaceflight experience, conducting a range of experiments and potentially exploring commercial possibilities.
Mengtian will be China’s third module launch in 18 months, following the launch of Tianhe in April 2021 and Wentian in July this year. China had earlier intended to launch Tianhe in 2018, but a Long March 5 launch failure in July 2017 and subsequent engine issues delayed the project.
Components of the fourth Long March 5B rocket were delivered to Qinglan port near Wenchang on Hainan island in early September by the purpose-built Yuanwang 21 and 22 cargo ships.
The five-meter-diameter rocket was manufactured and tested in the northern port city of Tianjin before being shipped south.
The launch is also expected to see the first stage of the Long March 5B enter orbit. The previous three Long March 5B launches have resulted in high-profile and controversial uncontrolled reentries of the roughly 22 metric ton core stages.
Mengtian was also shipped from Tianjin and arrived at Wenchang Aug. 9. The new module will see Tiangong expand to a living and working space of around 110 cubic meters. It will also provide greater power generation with another pair of 30-meter-long solar arrays like those on Wentian.
The module will host science racks for conducting experiments in microgravity, with areas of research including fluid physics, combustion and materials science and space technologies.
It also has a payload airlock which will allow the small, 5.2-meter-long robotic arm launched with the Wentian module to grasp science experiments and install them on payload adapters
Mengtian will be greeted in orbit by the three members of the Shenzhou-14 mission crew. Commander Chen Dong and crew mate Liu Yang on Thursday completed their first extravehicular activity, using the new Wentian airlock.
The Wentian module is currently docked at the forward port of the Tianhe docking hub. It will be transpositioned to a lateral port ahead of the arrival of Mengtian. The new module will also later be moved, completing the T-shaped space station.
The Shenzhou-14 crew are also scheduled to welcome the Shenzhou-15 crew aboard Tiangong late in the year, marking China’s first crew handover.
The Xuntian optical module, a co-orbiting, Hubble-class space survey telescope, is planned for launch in 2024. Xuntian will be capable of docking with the CSS for maintenance and repairs.
The space station itself could also be expanded from three to six modules, according to Chinese space officials. Such an expansion may depend upon other countries joining the project.