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China's To-Do List This Week: Dock With Space Lab, Explore Mariana Trench

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China's To-Do List This Week: Dock With Space Lab, Explore Mariana Trench

June22, 2012
From earth orbit to the watery deeps, it's been a good week for Chinese scientists and technologists.

This Monday, China's Shenzhou IX spacecraft successfully docked with its orbiting space module, letting a crew of three "taikonauts" board the space lab for the first time.

The docking and entry into the space lab was a matter of intense national pride, and the government televised all the procedures at the Tiangong 1 module, a name that means "heavenly palace." The crew included China's first female taikonaut Liu Yang, a pilot from the Chinese Air Force. Before her name was announced there were some bizarre statements from Chinese space experts about the criteria for selecting China's first space-going woman; they declared that she must be married, have given birth naturally, and have no scars or body odor.

The orbiting module is only about 10 meters long by 3 across, and is intended as a precursor to a larger space station that is scheduled to be launched in three sections beginning around 2020. China is also planning manned missions to the moon, maybe as soon as 2025.

Back on our own planet, another crew of intrepid Chinese explorers steered a submersible down into the Mariana Trench. The Jiaolong submersible, which I wrote about last year, was designed to be the deepest diving research sub in the world. This week the three-person sub descended into the Mariana Trench, the deepest crevice on Earth, and set a record for manned research submersibles when it reached a depth of 6965 meters below sea level. Today the Jiaolong is diving again, and the researchers hope to reach the ceremonial depth of 7000 meters before returning home. Before this week's mission, Japan's Shinkai 6500 was the deepest diving research sub.

Of course, a good deal of the Jiaolong's thunder has been stolen by private citizens who have built their own submersibles capable of reaching the absolute nadir of the Mariana Trench, nearly 11 000 meters down. Film director James Cameron completed that ultimate dive in March in his DeepSea Challenger, which has been described as a "vertical torpedo." Meanwhile the Virgin Oceanic team, funded in part by Sir Richard Branson, is still trying to get its underwater plane ready for the Mariana mission. However, these private vessels aren't capable of serious scientific exploration or extensive sample collection.

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China Breaks Deep-Sea Diving Record‎

Andrea Mustain, OurAmazingPlanet Staff Writer - Jun 22, 2012 05:41 PM ET
A Chinese manned submersible today (June 22) set a deep-diving record when the three-person sub descended 22,844 feet (6,963 meters) into the Pacific Ocean.

Today's dive, the deepest in a series of record-breaking dives in recent days, has placed the Jiaolong submersible at the top of a short list of state-owned vehicles capable of taking humans to the deepest reaches of the ocean.

Only China now possesses a vessel capable of descending deeper than 21,325 feet (6,500 meters).

The Jiaolong, named for a mythical sea dragon, began today's 10-hour dive at 7 a.m. local time, in a spot above a portion of the Mariana Trench. It spent three hours on the seafloor, according to Chinese media reports, and brought back geological and biological samples.

Only two other manned vehicles have gone deeper in the ocean, first in 1960 and then again this year.

Five decades ago, two men aboard the Trieste, a giant metal craft, reached the Challenger Deep, the deepest place on Earth. Just weeks ago, in late March, filmmaker James Cameron returned to the Challenger Deep in a craft he helped design. The solo dive took the Hollywood insider to a depth of 35,756 feet (10,890 meters), or nearly 7 miles beneath the surface of the sea. The round trip took two hours and 36 minutes.

Today's dive is the third the Jiaolong has completed in the Mariana Trench. A ship brought the submersible to the region on June 11, with the aim of conducting six dives, each deeper than the last, culminating with dives to 22,965 feet (7,000 meters) — the limit of the vessel's reach.

The mantle for deepest-diving manned vehicle has now passed to China from Japan, whose Shinkai 6500 held the previous record for a modern-day state-owned craft — as its name denotes, the submersible can reach 21,325 feet (6,500 meters). The United States is refurbishing Alvin, its deepest-diving craft, to be able to reach 21,325 feet, although it's not clear when the upgrade will be completed.
 
China Breaks Deep-Sea Diving Record. Only China now possesses a vessel capable of descending deeper than 21,325 feet (6,500 meters).

Source: http://www.defence.pk/forums/world-...lab-explore-mariana-trench.html#ixzz1ygA9MrOJ
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Bullsh!t!! You are plain WRONG! Don't spew clap trap when you aren't aware of the world around you and just cut and paste stuff without some research in a desperate bid to show the 'expertise' of the Chinese, though I agree they have achieved remarkable success - from outer space to inner space.

For your information, Hollywood director James Cameron, and Don Walsh and his accomplice hold the record plunging nearly 11km (36,000 feet) down to the deepest place in the ocean, the Mariana Trench in the western Pacific. Recently Cameron made the solo descent in a submarine called Deepsea Challenger, taking over two hours to reach the bottom.

Walsh accomplished this feat in the 1960s.

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Director James Cameron resurfaced after spending four hours on the ocean floor.



BBC News - Ocean trench: Take a dive 11,000m down
BBC News - James Cameron back on surface after deepest ocean dive
 
that's the article itself said it,not me,and please read more carefully before unleashing your wrath.

Of course, a good deal of the Jiaolong's thunder has been stolen by private citizens who have built their own submersibles capable of reaching the absolute nadir of the Mariana Trench, nearly 11 000 meters down. Film director James Cameron completed that ultimate dive in March in his DeepSea Challenger, which has been described as a "vertical torpedo." Meanwhile the Virgin Oceanic team, funded in part by Sir Richard Branson, is still trying to get its underwater plane ready for the Mariana mission. However, these private vessels aren't capable of serious scientific exploration or extensive sample collection.

Source: http://www.defence.pk/forums/world-...lab-explore-mariana-trench.html#ixzz1ygDScfPM

must be using different Criterion.
 
The Jiaolong has the greatest depth range of any manned research vehicle in the world the only manned expeditions to have gone deeper were the dives of the Trieste bathyscaphe in 1960 and the dive of the Deepsea Challenger in 2012, both diving to Challenger Deep. However, the vessels could not navigate along the bottom of the sea bed. On June 19, 2012, the Jiaolong reached a depth of 6,965 metres (22,851 feet).

Jiaolong (submersible) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 
sea floor exploration is very rewarding.

China has gained approval to explore a 10,000 sq km polymetallic sulphide ore deposit in an international seabed region of the southwest Indian Ocean.

The 15-year approval was secured by China from the International Seabed Authority (ISA).

China also obtained exclusive rights to prospect in a 75,000-square-km polymetallic nodule ore deposit in the east Pacific Ocean in 2001.
 
The Trieste carried 2 men ( Was it for scientific research?)
Deepsea Challenger solo (not for scientific research)
Jiaolong 3 men ( for scientific research - extraction of organisms, water samples etc)

So I think the article can rightfully claim

China Breaks Deep-Sea Diving Record. Only China now possesses a vessel capable of descending deeper than 21,325 feet (6,500 meters). - now deeper than 7,000 meters
 
Bullsh!t!! You are plain WRONG! Don't spew clap trap when you aren't aware of the world around you and just cut and paste stuff without some research in a desperate bid to show the 'expertise' of the Chinese, though I agree they have achieved remarkable success - from outer space to inner space.

as a senior member,you really lost it.
 
To do list China NOW Beijing time:

Tiangong 1 is telecasting live for a manual docking manerouver with Shenzhou 9 - 20 meters away from docking!

9, 8,7 6 5 4 1 0 meter(s) succsessful docking and locking of the 2 craft!

Congratulations China!
 
Now get ready for the news of China claiming the Marianas Trench in the Pacific Ocean and the region of outer space above Asia!
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The recent display of technology by the Chinese is indeed commendable.

Worth emulating.

Good luck & God speed.
 

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