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Shenzhou-10: China launches next manned space mission | Shenzhou-10: China launches next manned space mission |
(about 2 hours later) | |
China has launched its latest Shenzhou manned space mission. | China has launched its latest Shenzhou manned space mission. |
Three astronauts blasted away from the Jiuquan base in Inner Mongolia on a Long March 2F rocket at 17:38 Beijing time (09:38 GMT). | Three astronauts blasted away from the Jiuquan base in Inner Mongolia on a Long March 2F rocket at 17:38 Beijing time (09:38 GMT). |
The commander, Nie Haisheng, and his crew, Zhang Xiaoguang and Wang Yaping, plan to spend just under two weeks at the orbiting Tiangong space lab. | The commander, Nie Haisheng, and his crew, Zhang Xiaoguang and Wang Yaping, plan to spend just under two weeks at the orbiting Tiangong space lab. |
Wang is China's second female astronaut and she will beam the country's first lesson from space to students on Earth. | Wang is China's second female astronaut and she will beam the country's first lesson from space to students on Earth. |
The crew's capsule was ejected from the upper-stage of the rocket about nine minutes after lift-off. Mission controllers clapped enthusiastically once the ship's solar panels had been deployed. | |
Earlier in the day, Chinese TV carried pictures of President Xi Jinping wishing the crew luck. | |
"You have made Chinese people feel proud of ourselves,'' Xi told Nie and his colleagues. "You have trained and prepared yourselves carefully and thoroughly, so I am confident in your completing the mission successfully. "I wish you success and look forward to your triumphant return.'' | |
It should take just over 40 hours to raise the craft's orbit to the operating altitude of Tiangong some 335km (210 miles) above the planet's surface. | |
This mission, the fifth manned venture by China and scheduled to be the longest, is designated Shenzhou-10. | |
It is the latest step in China's plan to eventually put a permanently manned station above the Earth. | |
Tiangong-1 is the demonstrator. It was launched in 2011 to provide a target to test rendezvous and docking technologies. | Tiangong-1 is the demonstrator. It was launched in 2011 to provide a target to test rendezvous and docking technologies. |
The Shenzhou-9 crew - which included China's first female astronaut, Liu Yang - hooked up with the module for nearly 10 days in June 2012. | The Shenzhou-9 crew - which included China's first female astronaut, Liu Yang - hooked up with the module for nearly 10 days in June 2012. |
Nie's team aims to stay a few days longer, and like the crew of Shenzhou-9 will practise both manual and automatic dockings during the mission. | Nie's team aims to stay a few days longer, and like the crew of Shenzhou-9 will practise both manual and automatic dockings during the mission. |
Beijing hopes to launch its fully-fledged station at the turn of the decade. | Beijing hopes to launch its fully-fledged station at the turn of the decade. |
It is expected to have a mass of about 60 tonnes and comprise a number of interlocking modules. | It is expected to have a mass of about 60 tonnes and comprise a number of interlocking modules. |
Like the International Space Station (ISS), it will have long-duration residents and be supplied by robotic freighters. | Like the International Space Station (ISS), it will have long-duration residents and be supplied by robotic freighters. |
China's human spaceflight programme is conducted largely in isolation to the ISS partners. But this could change in the next few years. | |
Europe in particular has opened a dialogue that could eventually result in flight opportunities for its astronauts on the proposed Chinese space station. | |
"We are looking at possibilities to use this space station," the European Space Agency's human spaceflight director Thomas Reiter told the BBC last month. | |
"The way ahead is that we will likely see first an exchange of experiments. And there are now also a few colleagues at the European Astronaut Centre who have started Chinese language training." | |
Jonathan.Amos-INTERNET@bbc.co.uk and follow me on Twitter: @BBCAmos | Jonathan.Amos-INTERNET@bbc.co.uk and follow me on Twitter: @BBCAmos |