Temple One 天宫一号今天发射

10-20年后,在轨运营的空间站可能只有中国的天宫系列。
 
Article from www.space.com

http://www.space.com/12411-china-space-station-tiangong-readied-launch.html

China's First Space Station Module Readies For Liftoff
by Leonard David, SPACE.com’s Space Insider ColumnistDate: 24 July 2011 Time: 06:00 AM ET

China is pushing forward on readying its first space station module for launch. Meanwhile, that country's first astronaut is openly discussing the prospect of China's future engagement with the International Space Station.

The 8.5-ton Tiangong-1 module, the first in a series of connecting rooms that will be launched into orbit, has been transported to the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center in China's Gansu Province and is undergoing a final checkout before its liftoff on a Long March II-F carrier booster later this year.

Chinese news outlets report that Tiangong-1 is built to serve as a rendezvous and docking platform for China's future spacecraft. Once in Earth orbit, it would be followed by blastoff of an unpiloted Shenzhou-8 spacecraft in the latter half of this year, to carry out the nation's first space docking. [Photos: China's First Space Station]

That one-two punch for China's space station undertaking would see the launching of the Tiangong-1 target spacecraft and the Shenzhou-8 spaceship in the third and fourth quarters of 2011, respectively, according to several Chinese news outlets.

Take a look at how China's first space station, called Tiangong ("Heavenly Palace") will be assembled in orbit in this SPACE.com infographic.
CREDIT: Karl Tate/SPACE.com
View full size image
Tiangong-1 target spacecraft

Now on site, Tiangong-1 is loaded with payloads and is undergoing final tests before its launch.

During the recent Paris Air Show, a delegation from the China Manned Space Engineering Office accepted 300 flags from the International Astronautical Federation. These flags are to be taken to the Tiangong-1 target spacecraft. They are slated to be brought back to Earth by a Chinese astronaut when he completes China's first piloted rendezvous and docking linkup next year.

In December 2010, the same 300 IAF flags were sent to the International Space Station via the Russian TMA-20 piloted spacecraft. They were delivered back to Earth by the space shuttle Endeavour in June 2011.

The quest by China to move into space station development began in early September 2008, following the first spacewalk by a Chinese astronaut — Zhai Zhigang — during the three-person Shenzhou-7 mission. [How China's First Space Station Will Work (Infographic)]

Six of China's already flown astronaut corps take part in ceremonies marking a naming contest for elements of their space station program.
CREDIT: China Manned Space Engineering Office
View full size image
Space station standards

In a July 8 press report, China's first astronaut,Yang Liwei, was vocal regarding his country's interest in International Space Station cooperation. Yang, who is also deputy director of the China Manned Space Engineering Office in Beijing, made his comments to a domestic audience in an online interactive broadcast.

The growth of China's space program has been publicly praised by NASA officials.

"China being in space I think is a great thing. The more nations that get into space, the better cooperation we'll have with each," astronaut Rex Walheim, who flew on the final space shuttle mission last week, said during an in-flight interview with Reuters. "Space is one of the biggest international brotherhoods we have."

However, in his comments, Yang indicated that technical hurdles remain in pursuing such collaboration. Specifically, he emphasized that China's space station standards and the ISS docking standards do not agree.

The unification of standards is the first problem to solve in the effort to carry out future space station cooperation, Yang said, according to China's Xinhua news agency.

"This is the first time I am aware of that any high-profile official associated with the Chinese space program has made such a strong statement to the Chinese public on ISS participation," Gregory Kulacki, a senior analyst and China Project Manager for the Union of Concerned Scientists' Global Security Program in Cambridge, Mass., told SPACE.com. "And, as far as I know, it is the first time I have heard a Chinese official confirm that the docking hardware they will be using in the upcoming mission is not compatible with the ISS."

Leonard David has been reporting on the space industry for more than five decades. He is a winner of this year's National Space Club Press Award and a past editor-in-chief of the National Space Society's Ad Astra and Space World magazines. He has written for SPACE.com since 1999.
 
这东西,成吨烧钱,能否造福于国内百姓是另外的故事。但是,搞还得搞,就如同那原子弹。
 
这东西,成吨烧钱,能否造福于国内百姓是另外的故事。但是,搞还得搞,就如同那原子弹。

这东西潜在的科技,军事,经济利益大了去了, 连我这个卖热狗的小贩都看出来了.:D

有这对接的技术,呵呵,基本上指哪儿打那. 不战而屈人之兵.南海小国还要出来闹吗?
 
这东西潜在的科技,军事,经济利益大了去了, 连我这个卖热狗的小贩都看出来了.:D

呵,理论上是对的。:cool:

美国、前苏联/俄罗斯搞了几十年了,没有看到带来什么效益。:p
 
最好的国庆贺礼。

最大的好处,拉动科技发展。
 
最好的国庆贺礼。

最大的好处,拉动科技发展。

最大的好处是可以增加就业,在国内、国际忽悠。 :p:D
 
趁有钱赶紧搞。。。
 
呵,理论上是对的。:cool:

美国、前苏联/俄罗斯搞了几十年了,没有看到带来什么效益。:p

这效益大啦!没这本事,他们如何能坐稳老大、老二之位?
 
这效益大啦!没这本事,他们如何能坐稳老大、老二之位?

可惜,中华民族没有那种文化,搞也白搞。
 
最大的好处是可以增加就业,在国内、国际忽悠。 :p:D

没点本事如何在国际忽悠?君不见阿三想忽悠都想疯了。
 
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