Shenzhou 10

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Shenzhou 10
Tiangong 1 drawing.png
Diagram of Shenzhou-10 (right) docked with Tiangong-1 (left)
COSPAR ID 2013-029A
SATCAT № 39179
Mission duration 14 days, 14 hours, 29 minutes
Spacecraft properties
Spacecraft type Shenzhou
Manufacturer CASC
Crew
Crew size 3
Members Nie Haisheng
Zhang Xiaoguang
Wang Yaping
Start of mission
Launch date 11 June 2013, 09:38:02 (2013-06-11UTC09:38:02Z) UTC
Rocket Chang Zheng 2F/G[1]
Launch site Jiuquan LA-4/SLS
End of mission
Landing date 26 June 2013, 00:07 (2013-06-26UTC00:08Z) UTC
Landing site Inner Mongolia
Orbital parameters
Reference system Geocentric
Regime Low Earth
Perigee 262 kilometres (163 mi)
Apogee 315 kilometres (196 mi)
Inclination 42.7 degrees
Period 90.28 minutes
Epoch 12 June 2013[2]
Docking with Tiangong 1
Docking date 13 June 2013, 05:11 UTC
Undocking date 25 June 2013
Time docked 12 days
Shenzhou-10.png
Shenzhou programme
← Shenzhou 9 Shenzhou 11

Shenzhou 10 (Mandarin Chinese: 神舟十号 Shénzhōu shíhào) was a manned spaceflight of China's Shenzhou program that was launched on 11 June 2013. It was China's fifth manned space mission.[3][4] The mission had a crew of three astronauts: Nie Haisheng, who was mission commander and previously flew on Shenzhou 6, Zhang Xiaoguang, a former PLAAF squadron commander who conducted the rendezvous and docking, and Wang Yaping, the second Chinese female astronaut. The Shenzhou spacecraft docked with the Tiangong-1 trial space laboratory module on 13 June,[5] and the astronauts performed physical, technological, and scientific experiments while on board. Shenzhou 10 was the final mission to Tiangong 1 in this portion of the Tiangong program.[6] On 26 June 2013, after a series of successful docking tests, Shenzhou 10 returned to Earth.[7]

Preparations

Prior to the reboost of Tiangong 1 on 30 August 2012, it was projected that a launch window would open between late November and December 2012, when Tiangong-1's orbit had decayed to the level of a Shenzhou's standard orbit. With the reboost, it was expected that the orbital decay would bring Tiangong-1 within reach again in late January, so the Shenzhou 10 mission was anticipated for late January or February 2013.[8] At the 2012 Communist Party of China Leadership Congress, a space official stated that Shenzhou 10 was planned for the period between June and August 2013.[9]

It is the fifth manned mission of the Shenzhou programme, coming ten years after the original, Shenzhou 5.[10]

From 2012 November onwards, a feed of information ensued, including a desire for the crew to have a female member and that the actual launch date would be at the beginning of the June–August period. Knowledge of the conditions that China sets for launch windows for its piloted spacecraft allowed the likely launch date to be calculated as somewhere in the period between 7–13 June.[11]

Xinhua published an item from the Beijing Times that summed up the aims of the mission, and included the information that Wang Yaping was the only female trainee in the group of astronaut candidates.[12] Wang Yaping was announced to be the one of the crew in April 2013, the only member of the crew revealed until June, when the rest of the crew was revealed. The crew of Shenzhou 10 previously served as the backup crew to Shenzhou 9.[13][14] With Nie Haisheng's elevation to General, this marked the first instance that China would launch a flag officer into space, after they had become a general officer.[15]

Launch and docking

Shenzhou 10 was launched on 11 June 2013, at 09:38 UTC (17:38 local time). A Long March 2F[1] carrier rocket was used to perform the launch, flying from Pad 1 of the South Launch Site at the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Centre in Inner Mongolia. The spacecraft successfully reached low Earth orbit before the rocket detached. With a duration of 15 days, Shenzhou 10 was China's longest human spaceflight mission to date,[16][17] surpassing the previous record holder, Shenzhou 9 by two days.[18] CPC General Secretary, Chinese President Xi Jinping was present for both the departure ceremony, and the launch itself.[19]

The spacecraft docked with Tiangong 1 at 05:11 UTC on 13 June. The crew opened the hatch three hours later and entered the laboratory module.[20]

Objectives

Once docked at Tiangong 1, the three crew members conducted space medicine and technological experiments and other scientific endeavours. Nie Haisheng was mission commander, overseeing docking procedures, and pilot Zhang Xiaoguang was in charge of rendezvous and docking. Wang Yaping conducted the scientific experiments and taught a physics lesson to Chinese students by live television broadcast.[21] On 23 June Shenzhou 10 undocked from the station and performed a manual re-docking.[22]

Crew

Position Crew Member
Commander Nie Haisheng
Second spaceflight
Second crewmember Zhang Xiaoguang
First spaceflight
Third crewmember Wang Yaping
First spaceflight

While in orbit, Wang Yaping was one of only two women in space on 16 June 2013, the 50th anniversary of Vostok 6, the first space flight by a woman, Valentina Tereshkova. The other woman in space that day was Karen Nyberg on board the International Space Station[23]

Space lecture

One widely reported event of this mission was the space lecture[24] by Wang Yaping. On 20 June around 10:00 two physics teachers started the lesson in the Beijing classroom. A few minutes later the crew was visible to 60 million Chinese students. They saw Wang Yaping conduct five experiments:

  • Mass measurement: Using Newtons Second Law (F=m x a) the mass of Nie Haisheng was measured to be 74 kg.
  • Simple pendulum: The Beijing class started by showing a simple pendulum, then Wang Yaping did the same to show the pendulum moving in an endless rotation.
  • Behaviour of a Gyro: Wang Yaping put two Gyros up, one spinning and one not, and touched both slightly. The spinning gyro kept its axis.
  • Surface Tension: Wang Yaping showed the importance of surface tension in the absence of gravity by wobbling a water film inside a ring. When swinging the water film bulged, but it did not break.
  • Water ball: Wang Yaping showed that water will automatically form a (near perfect) ball in space and explained this using the same surface tension.

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
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  3. (Chinese) news.China.COM.cn, "专访十八大代表牛红光:神十将于明年6月发射", 新闻中心-中国网, 10 November 2012
  4. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  5. Chinese spacecraft blasts off from Gobi desert The Guardian, 2013-06-11.
  6. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  7. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  8. SpaceDaily, "Tiangong Orbit Change Signals Likely Date for Shenzhou 10", Robert Christy, 4 September 2012
  9. ScienceDaily, "China to launch new manned spaceship in 2013: Xinhua", Reuters, 10 November 2012 (accessed 2012-11-11)
  10. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  11. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  12. Xinhua (in Chinese), "Shenzhou 10 Arrived at Jiuquan for Launch June-August, Yaping is the Only Female Astronaut Candidate", Beijing Times, 1 April 2013
  13. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
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  22. http://www.china.org.cn/china/2013-06/23/content_29203515.htm
  23. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  24. http://www.go-taikonauts.com/en/chinese-space-news/668-published-9th-issue-of-newsletter-on-chinesea-space-activities-go-taikonauts

External links