Updates Shenzhou 10 mission updates, June 11-26, 2013

Solar panels deployed ! Another manned mission and 3 more humans in orbit ! :thumbup:
 
That's certainly always a good thing.:)
 
Hehe the manned space program chief has almost as much medals as a soviet general :P
 
Hehe the manned space program chief has almost as much medals as a soviet general :P

Ah I think he's also a general (heck commander Nie Haisheng is now a Major General too!), so that's not surprising.

Good job by the Chinese! With this mission their manned spaceflights are now becoming a normal phenomenon, instead of being "just" "stunt flights". :thumbup:
 
I just learned that in China, Tuesday was like Sunday in the West, so people were able to massively watch the launch.
 
I just learned that in China, Tuesday was like Sunday in the West, so people were able to massively watch the launch.

Erm, not quite. [ame="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Duanwu_Festival"]However tomorrow is a public holiday[/ame] (I think so, at least that's the case in Hong Kong), so many people are flying in to Jiuquan for the launch. :tiphat:
 
The whole launch from T-1 minute to spacecraft solar arrays deployment.

 
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Launch photos

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The Shenzhou seems to have more room than the Soyuz.

That's correct - the Soyuz RM has a max. diameter of 2.17 m and a habitable volume of 3.5 m^3; on the Shenzhou RM the values are 2.52 m and 6 m^3. One can say that Shenzhou is an upgraded and improved slightly larger Chinese version of the Soyuz. ;)
 
Not much news right now (except that the crew is enjoying the food they have :thumbup:) as the spacecraft continues to fly around the Earth. Docking with Tiangong 1 should happen at around 05:00 UTC tomorrow, although apparently the Chinese TV stations aren't bothered to cover it live!

In the meantime, enjoy:

 
A question that isn't directly connected to the mission but to the future of the Chinese Space Program:

Now this is apparently the last mission to Tiangong 1 and the next step is launching a bigger version, Tiangong 2 which is like 20 metric tons heavy.

Now the thing I'm wondering about: How are they going to launch that one? It would take the new Long March 5 which isn't expected to launch this year and in my opinion probably not in 2014 either.
So yeah, how do they get this thing into orbit?
 
A question that isn't directly connected to the mission but to the future of the Chinese Space Program:

Now this is apparently the last mission to Tiangong 1 and the next step is launching a bigger version, Tiangong 2 which is like 20 metric tons heavy.

Now the thing I'm wondering about: How are they going to launch that one? It would take the new Long March 5 which isn't expected to launch this year and in my opinion probably not in 2014 either.
So yeah, how do they get this thing into orbit?

I don't think Tiangong 2 will be that big - while its design is still not known with certainty (it will probably be somewhere around 13-15 tonnes and has two docking ports, something like a scaled down Salyut 6/7), latest news seems to point to it being launched in 2015 (probably on the CZ-7, which should fly by late 2014-early 2015). Then several crew missions and logistics flights with the future Chinese cargo supply spacecraft (which will be a modified TG-1) will fly to there over the next few years.

It seems that the earliest time the core module of the future Chinese space station can be launched is in 2018.
 
So wait, that's the last Chinese manned launch for the next two years?
I was just getting used to manned missions every few months.:lol:
 
It was a completely no fanfare act - so much that the Chinese went back to the old Soviet style and offered no public announcements of any kind covering the rendezvous and docking (:dry: :thumbsdown:) - but Shenzhou 10 had a flawless docking with Tiangong 1 earlier today. :thumbup: Contact was made at 05:11 UTC and hard dock was achieved at 05:18 UTC. Three hours later the three astronauts entered the small space outpost at 08:17 UTC.

 
Remember those bouncy floor panels on TG-1? The astronauts have replaced them with sturdier honeycomb paper panels brought along on SZ-10:

 
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