China Planning To Build Its Own Space Station In Two Years
KEY POINTS
- China is planning to build its own orbiting space station
- Construction of China's space station will begin next year
- China plans to launch 11 missions for the construction of the space station
China revealed that it is planning to build and complete its own orbiting space station in two years. According to the country’s space agency, it aims to complete the station through a total of 11 space missions.
Confirmation about China’s space station was made during a political conference held in Beijing on Tuesday. Zhou Jianping, the chief designer of China’s human spaceflight program unveiled the details of the station’s construction.
According to Zhou, the entire station will weigh about 66 metric tons and will have a total of three modules. Once completed, it will be able to host three astronauts staying at the station for six-month rotations.
During their missions aboard the station, the astronauts will work on various experiments and international projects related to the field of astronomy, life science, medicine, biotechnology, and microgravity concepts and technologies.
The space station will orbit Earth from an altitude of 340 to 350 kilometers for at least 10 years. Zhou noted the station would work with a co-orbiting telescope that has a larger field angle than the Hubble Space Telescope.
“Its resolution ratio will be equivalent to the well-known Hubble telescope, but its field angle will be 300 times larger than the Hubble telescope,” Zhou said, according to Space News. “With it, we can finish the survey of large areas in space in 10 years.”
Construction of the station is expected to begin sometime in early 2021 with the launch of its first component, the Tianhe core module. It will be launched through the Long March 5B rocket. This will then be followed by a crewed spaceflight and a cargo mission.
In total, China plans to launch 11 missions that are all focused on the construction of the station. These include four crewed flights, four cargo missions, a core module launch, and the deployment of two experiment modules.
Aside from the Long March 5B, China will also use the Long March 2F and Long March 7 rockets for the upcoming missions.
China aims to complete the orbiting outpost by 2023. Although the station is currently planned to have three modules, Zhou noted that it could be expanded to accommodate six main components.
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