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China to Launch First Module of Massive Space Station

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China to Launch First Module of Massive Space Station
The new orbiting laboratory will host research from Chinese and international scientists

April 21, 2021

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Since the Soviet Union launched the first space station, Salyut 1, 50 years ago, humans have lived on a total of 11 such facilities in Earth orbit. China will soon add one more to that list. With the core module of the Chinese Space Station (CSS) scheduled to lift off at the end of April, the cumulation of a project the nation’s government initially envisioned in 1992 is finally entering the construction phase.

After the core module reaches space, China plans at least 10 more launches of other major modules, as well as crewed and cargo missions, to complete the station’s assembly by the end of 2022. At that time the CSS will join the International Space Station (ISS) as the only fully operational space stations in orbit.

PUTTING IT TOGETHER
The T-shape, 100-metric-ton CSS will comprise three major modules: the 18-meter-long core module, called Tianhe (“Harmony of the Heavens”), and two 14.4-meter-long experiment modules, called Wentian (“Quest for the Heavens”) and Mengtian (“Dreaming of the Heavens”), which will be permanently attached to either side of the core. As the station’s management and control center, Tianhe can accommodate three astronauts for stays of up to six months.

Visiting astronauts and cargo spaceships will hook up to the core module from opposite ends. Both it and Wentian are equipped with robotic arms on the outside, and Mengtian has an airlock for the maintenance and repair of experiments mounted on the exterior of the station. Tianhe has a total of five docking ports, which means an extra module can be added for future expansion. The station is designed to operate for more than 10 years.

The CSS has less than one fourth the mass of the ISS—the largest and most expensive human-made structure in space, which was cooperatively built by 15 nations. “We did not intend to compete with the ISS in terms of scale,” says Gu Yidong, chief scientist of the China Manned Space program. Instead the three-module configuration is “based on China’s needs for scientific experiments” and “what we consider a reasonable size for the sake of cost-effectiveness.”

To develop the CSS, China followed a three-step strategy by first building manned spacecraft (the Shenzhou missions), followed by mini space stations (Tiangong-1 and 2) and then the multimodule station launching soon. Construction of the CSS was officially approved in 2010. Though China’s heavy-lift rocket experienced a launch failure in 2017, delaying the liftoff of Tianhe by more than a year, the country’s space leaders hope to stick to the goal of completing space station construction by 2022 through intensive launches in the coming two years.

DOMESTIC AND INTERNATIONAL EXPERIMENTS
The CSS will house 14 refrigerator-size scientific experiment racks and a few general purpose racks that provide power, data, cooling and other services to various research projects. There will also be more than 50 docking points for experiments that will be mounted on the outside of the station to study how materials react to space exposure. The science inside and out will include space physiology, life science, fluid physics, materials science, astronomy and Earth observation. So far, about 100 experiments have been selected from more than 800 domestic proposals, Gu says. Some of them could start collecting data as early as next year.

For instance, the station will use the world’s most precise clocks and coldest atoms to support fundamental research in general relativity and quantum physics. The clocks on the CSS are designed to reach incredibly low levels of instability, with only one second of error every three billion years. The ultracold-atoms experiment rack can cool atoms to 10–10 kelvins, the lowest temperature achievable with current technologies. Some racks will be the first of their kind on a space station, including one dedicated to studying phase changes between the liquid and gas states of matter because those processes become much more distinct in microgravity. These studies could, for instance, help to develop smaller and more efficient cooling devices for spacecraft and even laptops.

The station will also reserve the space and resources for a number of international experiments. Tricia Larose, a medicine researcher at the University of Oslo, is leading Tumors in Space, a 31-day experiment that will fly on the CSS and test if weightlessness can slow or stop the growth of cancer, among other goals. As one of the nine international projects selected by the China Manned Space Agency (CMSA) and the United Nations Office for Outer Space Affairs (UNOOSA), the mission will use three-dimensional stem cell organoids, or “mini colons,” grown from cancerous and healthy colon tissues of the same patient to study how DNA mutations are affected by microgravity. “All previous cancer experiments in space have used two-dimensional cell lines,” Larose says. “In comparison, organoids mimic the organ’s structure and function and are the most physiologically relevant biosamples to use.”

The CSS can expect company a year or two after its completion: China plans to launch a Hubble-size telescope that will operate in the same orbit a few hundred kilometers away. As a part of the CSS, the China Sky Survey Telescope (also called Xuntian) will have 300 times Hubble’s field of view and will address a wide range of science in the near-ultraviolet and optical wave bands. The observatory will investigate cosmology, the large-scale structure of matter in the universe, and galaxy and stellar science, as well as dark matter and dark energy. It is designed to dock with the space station for servicing if needed, offering an easy, fuel-efficient and “better way to engage astronauts to ensure the performance of the telescope,” Gu says.

Xuntian has similar designs and goals as the European Space Agency’s Euclid mission and NASA’s Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope, which will both launch in coming years, but they will be working in complementary wave bands. Gu believes that cooperation among the three telescopes and the sharing of observational data will lead to a deeper understanding of the universe and fundamental physics.

China welcomes collaboration on the CSS from scientists all over the world, Gu stresses. Soon the CMSA-UNOOSA collaboration will release a second call for international experiment proposals. Scientists can also apply through institutional partnerships for access to resources on the space station. It is not clear what level of international collaboration the CSS will receive, however, because of geopolitical hurdles. U.S. law heavily restricts NASA scientists from collaborating directly with China. In Europe, pressure from the agency also makes it difficult to get funding for projects that would involve the Chinese space program. Larose notes that she and her colleagues encountered “an unexpected level of hesitancy” toward grant applications related to the CSS. It is frustrating, she says, because cancer knows no boundaries, and looking for better cancer treatment benefits everyone in every country on Earth. “When are we going to stop looking at our differences and start focusing on our similarities?” Larose asks.


 
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I am sure US will hope to shoot it down and then claim China space station is threat to mankind. :rolleyes:
 
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I am sure US will hope to shoot it down and then claim China space station is threat to mankind. :rolleyes:
They always make crazy claims, today's US acts like a spoiled brat forever throwing a tantrum, it lost all the respect that I used to have for them in the past.

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They always make crazy claims, today's US acts like a spoiled brat forever throwing a tantrum, it lost all the respect that I used to have for them in the past.

China can 'grapple' US satellites with robotic arm, commander says
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April 21, 2021
Very likely ISS will not continue beyond 2024. Russia has already given the word that they will not further fund and continue the obligation of service their module for ISS after 2024. Russia module of ISS are very important as the are the core.

Russian surely will ask for orbitant price from western space agency if they want Russian to continue to maintain their core.

Italy space agency has already collaborate in China space station. And CNSA totally charge them free. ESA will soon join China space station for sure as ISS slot allocation for them is even lower compare to JXA.
 
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Russian surely will ask for orbitant price from western space agency if they want Russian to continue to maintain their core.

NASA doesn't need a low earth orbiting space station. The emphasis is on building the 'Gateway' a space station near the moon to serve as staging platform for future deep space manned missions.

Well if NASA astronauts ever need to spend a few weeks in low earth orbit they can alway check in to the 220 room luxury Voyager hotel, complete with basketball court and maybe a swimming pool. I think they accept all major credit cards and all nationalities..

https://www.dezeen.com/2021/03/09/space-hotel-voyager-station-gateway-foundation/
 
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I am sure US will hope to shoot it down and then claim China space station is threat to mankind. :rolleyes:

NO!

Who will deliver takeout to the ISS then?

Seriously though, this is a great idea to start building bigger facilities in space.
 
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Very likely ISS will not continue beyond 2024. Russia has already given the word that they will not further fund and continue the obligation of service their module for ISS after 2024. Russia module of ISS are very important as the are the core.

Russian surely will ask for orbitant price from western space agency if they want Russian to continue to maintain their core.

Italy space agency has already collaborate in China space station. And CNSA totally charge them free. ESA will soon join China space station for sure as ISS slot allocation for them is even lower compare to JXA.


ISS will continue beyond 2024 as Russia already said it will quit in 2025. The question is how long will the ISS last after the Russians quits. They also mentioned there are cracks beyond repair, cannot fix the air leaks. So when will the US decides to let it burn remains to be seen but it is not feasible to keep spending huge amount of money to keep supporting it. Also Russia seems to be working on its own space station, so America will have to decide whether they will have to built a new one with so much debt piling on and the ever increasing defense budget.
 
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Possible expanded CSS configuration with all the main modules' backup installed... this would immediately double the size, mass, and habitable area of the CSS...

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Yang HONG / Higher Education Press
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ISS will continue beyond 2024 as Russia already said it will quit in 2025. The question is how long will the ISS last after the Russians quits. They also mentioned there are cracks beyond repair, cannot fix the air leaks. So when will the US decides to let it burn remains to be seen but it is not feasible to keep spending huge amount of money to keep supporting it. Also Russia seems to be working on its own space station, so America will have to decide whether they will have to built a new one with so much debt piling on and the ever increasing defense budget.

The International Space Station has been in service for an extended period of time, and Russian experts say it will be an avalanche next.
 
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I hope someday traveling to moon will be as cheap as domestic US flights :D
 
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It will be, someday, but first there has to be enough of a reason to fly out there.

Tourism is attractive, Amazon , Tesla , Microsoft enter space game is huge for advancement, lots of dollars going in R&D, but i guess the first priority will be a stop station for Deep space mission as @dbc mentioned.
 
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Tourism is attractive, Amazon , Tesla , Microsoft enter space game is huge for advancement, lots of dollars going in R&D, but i guess the first priority will be a stop station for Deep space mission as @dbc mentioned.

All of those possibilities will have to deal with the energy costs for overcoming the initial portion of Earth's gravitational pull in a safe and repeatable manner. It will take a while.
 
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All of those possibilities will have to deal with the energy costs for overcoming the initial portion of Earth's gravitational pull in a safe and repeatable manner. It will take a while.

Its better if they take time to perfect the technology specially of re-entry, landing of rockets can be tricky and and cause massive catastrophic accidents.
 
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Its better if they take time to perfect the technology specially of re-entry, landing of rockets can be tricky and and cause massive catastrophic accidents.

That is still basically an energy management problem caused by gravity and its associated costs, only in reverse while landing.
 
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