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China Outlines Space Program Till 2010

The blueprint states that China will continue to conduct manned space flight and lunar exploration.
by Staff Writers
Beijing (XNA) Mar 20, 2007
China's space program scientists have published outlines of plans to begin development of a space laboratory and spacewalking by Chinese astronauts by 2010.

The plans are among goals published by the Commission of Science Technology and Industry for National Defense in its 11th five-year (2006-2010) plan for space science development.

The blueprint states that China will continue to conduct manned space flight and lunar exploration.

Other plans include:

+ A Moon orbit in 2007 to acquire "three-dimensional pictures".

+ Rendezvous and docking of space-craft.

+ Development of an hard-X ray modulation telescope for China's first astronomical satellite in 2010 to research black holes.

+ The launch of the Shijian (Practice)-10 scientific recoverable satellite in 2009 to conduct micro-gravity and space life experiments.

+ Participation in the space environment exploration program and the World Satellite Observatory of Ultra-Violet Radiation project with Russia and the solar burst exploration mini-satellite project with France.

+ Further research on a solar telescope and preliminary research on Kuafu project, a comprehensive research project on the sun.

Space science is the driving force of science and technology development, officials with the commission said and added these space programs would have deep and important effect.

Source: Xinhua News Agency

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China To Launch New Direct Broadcast Satellite To Replace SinoSat-2
Beijing (Xinhua) Mar 19, 2007
China will launch a new direct broadcast satellite later this year after its predecessor, Sinosat-2, suffered a fatal technical failure in space one month after its launch. Chinasat-9, also the country's second direct-to-home satellite, was scheduled to be launched in September or October, said Du Baichuan, deputy director of the science and technology sector of the State Administration of Radio, Film and Television.







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