By

Clara Moskowitz /

Space.com/ June 18, 2012, 10:21 AM

China successfully docks manned space capsule

Space.com

(SPACE.com) Chinese astronauts docked two spaceships in orbit for the first time Monday (June 18), marking a vital milestone in the country's quest to build a manned space station in Earth orbit.

The three-person crew of the Shenzhou 9 spacecraft, which includes the China's first female astronaut, arrived at the country's Tiangong 1 ("Heavenly Palace") test module in orbit and joined the two craft to complete the successful docking. The maneuver is the first manned docking for China, making it the third nation, after the United States and Russia, to achieve such a feat.

"We are one step closer to our destination of constructing a future space station," an official with China's space program said during a broadcast on the state-run CNTV news network. "This is the first successful crew transportation mission for China."

Shenzhou 9 and the Tiangong 1 space module docked in an automatic mode during Monday's successful link-up, with the Chinese astronauts (called taikonauts) to stay in orbit for about 13 days. Later this week, the Shenzhou 9 crew will undock their spacecraft from Tiangong 1 and then re-dock in a manual mode in another test, Chinese space officials have said.

Shenzhou 9 lifted off on a Chinese Long March 2F rocket from the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center in China's northern Gansu province Saturday (June 16). [Launch Photos: China's Shenzhou 9 Mission]

The mission is notable not just for the docking, but for the fact that this crew includes China's first female taikonaut. People's Liberation Army pilot Liu Yang is flying with repeat astronaut Jing Haipeng and rookie Liu Wang.

After Monday's successful docking, Jing entered the Tiangong 1 module first and waved to a TV camera to flight controllers on Earth. Liu Wang followed Jing inside the module while Liu Yang remained inside the Shenzhou 9 capsule performing final checks.

Later, Liu Yang entered Tiangong 1 and applause was heard from China's mission control room at the Beijing Aerospace Control Center as all three Shenzhou 9 astronauts boarded the module.

"I feel honored to fly into space on behalf of hundreds of millions of Chinese females," Liu said before the launch, according to Chinese state news agency Xinhua.

Now that they have arrived at their new orbital home, the taikonauts will soon start settling in and exploring the Tiangong 1 module. In addition to necessary equipment, a collection of surprise trinkets have been planted around the lab for the astronauts to find, both for fun and to test the crew's puzzle-solving abilities in orbit.

"Discovering unexpected items by themselves could add more fun to living in space," said Chen Shanguang, general director of the astronaut system department, Xinhua reported.

Tiangong 1 launched in September 2011, with another unmanned vehicle, Shenzhou 8, lifting off in November of that year to link up with it, marking China's first docking. This crewed docking a new step forward for China's plans to built a large manned space station by the year 2020.

Eventually, China aims to land people on the moon, officials with the country's space program have said.

Follow Clara Moskowitz on Twitter @ClaraMoskowitz or SPACE.com @Spacedotcom. We're also on Facebook & Google+

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4 Comments Add a Comment
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Alan281 says:
Interesting that they even have female astronauts considering how they(Chinese) seem to think females are pretty worthless(at least as children).

Congrats to them.
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bruswer replies:
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Middle East to the countries with "Arab Spring", women just got much need "freedom" county like American allied Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, or better, you can just move to Iraqi, Libya to see how women being treated!
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naksuthin says:
One has to marvel at the progress China has made in the last 40 years.
Back in the 1970's China was a poor backward nation racked by political unrest as young Red Guards ransacked the country.

Today it is the fastest growing economy on earth and second only to the US in GDP.
And they've accomplished all this with hard work, a strong central government, draconian one child policy, and good economic policy.
They've been able to combine the best of Socialism with the best of Capitalism.
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SukanMakmuri replies:
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Point well taken. Not sure what else China cannot do. They overcame a lot to make so much progress. They don't have to be first to the space, just like Apple did not have to be the first smart-phone producer.

BTW, thousands of years ago when China was already advanced with the literature, art, fine silk, etc., the rest of the world was somewhere else...
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