BEIJING, Sept. 27, 2008

Astronaut Makes China's First Spacewalk

Milestone Paves The Way For Chinese Space Station

  • A screen shot from China Central Television shows Chinese

    A screen shot from China Central Television shows Chinese "taikonaut" Liu Boming, left, delivering a Chinese national flag to Zhai Zhigang while performing China's first spacewalk outside the Shenzhou VII manned spacecraft, Saturday, September 27, 2008.  (Imaginechina via AP Images)

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(AP)  A Chinese astronaut on Saturday performed the nation's first-ever spacewalk, the latest milestone in an ambitious program that is increasingly rivaling the United States and Russia in its rapid expansion.

Mission commander Zhai Zhigang floated out of the orbiter module's hatch in the spacewalk, shown live on state broadcaster CCTV. Tethered to handles attached to the Shenzhou 7 ship's orbital module's exterior, Zhai remained outside for about 13 minutes before climbing back inside and closing the hatch behind him.

"Shenzhou 7 has left the module, physically feel very good. Greetings to all the people of the nation and all the people of the world," Zhai said.

Fellow astronaut Liu Boming also emerged briefly from the capsule to hand Zhai a Chinese flag that he waved for an exterior camera filming the event. The third crew member, Jing Haipeng, monitored the ship from inside the re-entry module.

Top Communist Party officials including President Hu Jintao watched the spacewalk from a Beijing command center, breaking into applause with the successful completion of each stage of the maneuver.

The successful spacewalk paves the way for assembling a space station from two Shenzhou orbital modules, the next major goal of China's manned spaceflight program. China is also pursuing lunar exploration and may attempt to land a man on the moon in the next decade - possibly ahead of NASA's 2020 target date for returning to the moon.

China launched its first manned mission, Shenzhou 5, in 2003, becoming only the third country after Russia and the United States to launch a man into space. That was followed by a two-man mission in 2005.

In step with its growing list of achievements, the military-backed program has grown progressively less secretive and officials have hinted in recent days at a desire for greater cooperation with other nations. China plans to mass produce the next version of the Shenzhou ship to service a future space station and says it may make such missions available to other countries.

Space cooperation between China and other nations has so far been limited and the U.S. has refused Chinese involvement in the international space station for fear it could gain technical secrets applicable to its arms industry.

A Chinese space program official said earlier that Russian technicians would assist in Saturday's spacewalk, but it wasn't clear what role they played.

Since blasting off from their northwestern China launch base on Friday, the astronauts had been largely occupied with preparing the suits and adapting to zero gravity. Meals aboard the craft have followed a typical Chinese menu, featuring versions of kung pao chicken, shrimp and dried fruit, the official Xinhua News Agency said.

On Friday, the three-module capsule shifted from an oval orbit to a more stable circular orbit 213 miles above Earth, meaning it is circling at a constant distance.

The change ensured that Earth's gravitational pull would not vary during the spacewalk attempt and will help Shenzhou make a precise landing on the Inner Mongolian Steppe on Sunday after its re-entry vehicle bursts through Earth's atmosphere, Xinhua said.

Following the spacewalk, the craft is to release an 88-pound satellite which is to circle the orbiter and send back images to mission control.

© MMVIII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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by stn_sage September 28, 2008 12:22 AM EDT
China will be passing our ''dead in the water'' space program in a couple years! When that happens, they''ll have to reveal the other space program that is only rumors at this point!
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by stn_sage September 28, 2008 12:18 AM EDT
In last night''''s debate, it was sad to see both Obama and McCain say Al Queda is America''''s most dangerous enemy. This belittles America and bestows undue respect on this little group of nobodies.
Posted by cdfoxtrot3 at 08:06 PM : Sep 27, 2008
------------------
You''re absolutely correct about this! Another thing- Al Quaeda isn''t guilty of half the stuff our politicians blame them for! They''re just used as the ''fall guy''!

Our politicians have gone from statesmen to a bunch of partying, mooching, and pandering partisan incompetents who screvv everything up and then walkaway from it to retire financially secure for the rest of THEIR lives! Screvv them!

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by cdfoxtrot3 September 27, 2008 11:06 PM EDT
In last night''s debate, it was sad to see both Obama and McCain say Al Queda is America''s most dangerous enemy. This belittles America and bestows undue respect on this little group of nobodies. America''s leaders are clearly missing the emergence of China and the re-emergence of Russia. These will be America''s chief rivals and potentially greatest threat in the period ahead. China wasn''t even mentioned last night, and the discussion on Russia was reduced to soundbites on Georgia. America deserves better. It''s a shame there''s no minimum qualifying test in geopolitics required in order to run for the office of President.


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by jesusface September 27, 2008 9:56 PM EDT
Now, if they can only get their baby milk formula right!
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by williewomper September 27, 2008 8:45 PM EDT
Congratulations China on your accomplishment.
However, if it weren''t for the people of the United States, who basically have supported your economy in the past couple of decades, China would still be stuck in the dark ages. One day maybe China will be helping us out of our economic downward spiral thanks to greedy U. S. corporations and the Republican Party.
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by missingamerica September 27, 2008 7:20 PM EDT
Congratulations, China - you have made magnificent progress since Reagan.

I hope that you are magnanimous in your future.
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by wcreader September 27, 2008 5:43 PM EDT
So glad to see China making progress in Space walk. A small step in stepping into the space, a big/huge step toward fulfilling a dream of the space travelling. Congratulation!
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by eddom949 September 27, 2008 5:21 PM EDT
Wow, Olympics and the spacewalk, not too bad...
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by hypnotoad72 September 27, 2008 1:57 PM EDT
Instead of reinventing the wheel, why couldn''t they ask all the countries that have put astronauts into orbit and share information? We share jobs and everything else, right?
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by rbburnerjr September 27, 2008 1:39 PM EDT
Was this space walk worth the health and lives of 53,000 children? The Chinese governments thinks so and Bush,Cheney and McClain probably would too.
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by daisywang-2009 September 27, 2008 1:25 PM EDT
I feel proud of my country who can make so great progress in space. Although China has some problems now, she is still learning from others and trying her best to change herself. Don''t always say bad thing to her. She can be great again some day. I believe.
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by ubrew12 September 27, 2008 11:33 AM EDT
This is a great accomplishment. However, we shouldn''t lose sight of the fact that OUR astronauts, when they do a spacewalk, aren''t seeing if they''ll survive it.

They are working on their home.
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