Vakencorner
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China plans to launch lunar probe
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Mon Oct 22, 11:18 AM ET
By AUDRA ANG, Associated Press Writer China will launch its first lunar probe this week in a key step toward building the basis for future space exploration, an official said Monday. The launch window for the Chang'e 1 orbiter has been set for Oct. 24-26, with the prime time being Wednesday at 6 p.m. (1000 GMT), said Li Guoping, a spokesman for the China National Space Administration. "The orbiting of the moon is a high-tech project of self-innovation," Li told reporters. "It will set the technological foundation for the development of China's space exploration." The move comes weeks after regional rival Japan said that its probe was in high orbit over the moon and all was going well as it began a yearlong project to map and study the lunar surface - a big leap forward in Asia's undeclared space race. The rivalry is likely to be joined soon by India, which plans to send its own lunar probe into space in April. The Chang'e 1 would be launched from the Xichang Satellite Launch Center in Sichuan province in southwest China, Li said. "Inspections of the satellite and the rocket have been completed. The test results are normal and they fully fulfill the technical requirements," he said, reading from a prepared statement. He did not take any questions. After the Chang'e is launched, it will orbit the earth while technical adjustments are made, and by Nov. 5 it will enter the moon's orbit, Li said. The goal of the project - named after a legendary Chinese goddess who flew to the moon - is to analyze chemical and mineral composition and to explore the characteristics of the lunar surface, he said. It will be the inaugural mission for an aerospace engineering system and a way to "accumulate experience for later exploration," Li said. The satellite will use stereo cameras and X-ray spectrometers to map three-dimensional images of the surface and study the moon's dust. It will transmit its first photo back to China in the second half of November. "Then it will work for one year of scientific exploration," Li said. China sent shock waves through the region in 2003, when it became the first Asian country to put its own astronauts into space. This year, China also blasted an old satellite into oblivion with a land-based anti-satellite missile, the first such test ever conducted by any nation, including the United States and Russia. "The mission has a very strong scientific emphasis," said Sun Kwok, chair professor of physics and dean of science at the University of Hong Kong. "It's not just about technology. It's more than just launching a satellite, it's more than putting the first satellite in orbit." "It's very good for China being a major power," said Kwok, who is on an advisory panel of Chinese scientists who have been invited to help with data analysis on the Chang'e's findings. "It shows that China is moving more and more into the international space community." http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20071022/ap_on_sc/china_lunar_probe_1
Posted on: 2007/10/22 21:10
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Det finns bara EN sanning
Så farlig är vägen, att man aldrig ser stupet, man faller sakta, stilla och lugnt – i djupaste trygghet – uppbyggd av strunt! Jag kom, jag såg, jag vände åter |
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AFP - Asia's space race heats up as China heads for moon
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AFP - Asia's space race heats up as China heads for moon
Thursday October 25, 01:09 AM BEIJING (AFP) - Asia's space race heated up on Wednesday as China launched its first lunar orbiter, an event hailed by the world's most populous nation as a milestone event in its global rise. China's year-long expedition, costing 1.4 billion yuan (184 million dollars), kicks off a programme that aims to land an unmanned rover on the moon's surface by 2012 and put a man on the moon by about 2020. The launch of Chang'e I, which will explore and map the moon's surface, came after Japan last month launched its first lunar probe and ahead of a similar mission planned by India for next year. Chang'e I took off at 6:05 pm (1005 GMT) -- perfect timing for a national television audience that watched it live after repeatedly being told by the government-controlled press about the significance of the event. President Hu Jintao issued his personal congratulations following the successful launch, according to a brief statement carried by the official Xinhua news agency less than 90 minutes after the take-off. China has described the lunar orbiter as the third major milestone event for the nation's space programme, after developing rockets and satellites since the 1970s and sending men into orbit in 2003 and 2005. "Flying to the moon is the nation's long cherished dream," Xinhua said. In the lead up to the launch, one of the chief scientists in China's moon programme, Ouyang Ziyuan, also pointed to the broader message the mission would send to the Chinese people and the world. "As lunar exploration embodies our overall national strength, it is very significant for raising our international prestige and our national unity," Ouyang told the ruling Communist Party's mouthpiece, the People's Daily. To further drum up Chinese pride, the national anthem and 31 other patriotic songs were uploaded onto the satellite so it could broadcast the music back to China. In recent years China's space programme has taken huge strides, in parallel with the country's spectacular economic rise. China successfully launched astronaut Yang Liwei into orbit in 2003, making it the third country after the former Soviet Union and the United States to put a man in space. Its third manned space flight is scheduled for late 2008 on a mission that will include three astronauts and China's first ever space walk. However on September 14, Japan stole a march on China by launching its first lunar orbiter as a key step in putting a man on the moon by 2020. Although the timeframes for China and Japan to eventually put someone on the moon are similar, some Chinese officials tried to play down the rivalry. "Japan began its lunar exploration research much earlier than we did, so we have always stressed that with the launch of Chang'e, we don't want to be talking about who is first," top mission official Zhang Jianqi said in the state-run press. Zhang said China's project engineers were more concerned over whether new technology would perform correctly during the flight, which is named after a character from Chinese mythology who ascended from Earth to live on the moon. Chang'e I is expected to leave Earth's orbit on October 31, enter lunar orbit on November 5 and transmit its first pictures of the moon back to Earth by the end of November. According to Rene Oosterlinck, a European Space Agency spokesman, the race to the moon, which also includes a renewed US effort, is aimed at setting up permanent lunar bases as a first step to eventual exploration of Mars. "The Chinese satellite will mainly be taking three dimensional pictures of the moon surface to see where it will be possible to land in the future to set up a lunar base," Oosterlinck told AFP. http://nz.news.yahoo.com/071024/8/25si.html
Posted on: 2007/10/24 15:33
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Det finns bara EN sanning
Så farlig är vägen, att man aldrig ser stupet, man faller sakta, stilla och lugnt – i djupaste trygghet – uppbyggd av strunt! Jag kom, jag såg, jag vände åter |
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Re: AFP - Asia's space race heats up as China heads for moon
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China says lunar exploration not for military use
http://www.reuters.com/article/scienceNews/idUSPEK30446020071101
Posted on: 2007/11/1 21:42
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Det finns bara EN sanning
Så farlig är vägen, att man aldrig ser stupet, man faller sakta, stilla och lugnt – i djupaste trygghet – uppbyggd av strunt! Jag kom, jag såg, jag vände åter |
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Re: AFP - Asia's space race heats up as China heads for moon
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HAARP, China, Russia And The Moon
http://www.rense.com/general50/hrp.htm Did Man Reach The Moon Thousands Of Years Ago? Seems highly unlikely, but check out some of these fascinating myths and legends! http://www.rense.com/general58/moon.htm
Posted on: 2007/11/1 21:58
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Det finns bara EN sanning
Så farlig är vägen, att man aldrig ser stupet, man faller sakta, stilla och lugnt – i djupaste trygghet – uppbyggd av strunt! Jag kom, jag såg, jag vände åter |
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Re: AFP - Asia's space race heats up as China heads for moon
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Scientists unveil NASA’s secrets about cities on the Moon
and microbes on Mars U.S. scientists say that Apollo astronauts found ancient ruins on the Moon http://i191.photobucket.com/albums/z2 ... nger_album/moon-ruins.jpg The former manager of the Data and Photo Control Department at NASA’s Lunar Receiving Laboratory during the manned Apollo Lunar Program, Ken Johnston, has released quite a number of sensational statements recently in the USA. The specialist said that U.S. astronauts found ancient ruins of artificial origin and a previously unknown technology to control gravitation when then landed on the Moon. Astronauts took pictures of the objects that they found, but NASA ordered Johnston to destroy the images. Johnston did not follow the order. He said that the U.S. government had been keeping this information a secret for 40 years. Johnston's startling Apollo allegations have recently appeared in a new book, "Dark Mission: the Secret History of NASA," co-authored by former NASA consultant and CBS Science Advisor, Richard C. Hoagland and Mike Bara, an aerospace engineering consultant. According to Kay Ferrari, JPL Director of the SSA Program (in a phone call to Johnston last week), it was Johnston "being quoted [as] criticizing NASA in Hoagland's new book, 'Dark Mission,'" that prompted her to ask for Johnston's resignation from the SSA Program. When Johnston refused, citing First Amendment protections of free speech afforded all NASA employees, even those at JPL, Ferrari apparently decided to remove him arbitrarily from the SSA Program this week without cause. The low quality pictures included in the book depict ruins of buildings, huge dome-like objects made of glass, stone towers and castled hanging in the air. “I have nothing to lose. I have quarreled with NASA and I got fired,” Ken Johnston said. Indeed, NASA believes that allegations of the ancient civilization found on the Moon are not serious. The authors of the controversial book also say that President John F. Kennedy, who launched the lunar race with the Soviet Union, actually intended to share extraterrestrial technologies with Moscow. Making a speech at the United Nations Organizations in September of 1963, Kennedy supposedly offered the USSR to organize a joint mission to the Moon. Richard Hoagland believes that Washington’s interest in the Moon exploration that suddenly appeared after 30 years of silence is based on the lunar findings that the U.S. government has been keeping a secret for 40 years. Russia, China, Japan and even India have publicly announced their plans to work on the exploration of the Moon. The USA, Hoagland said, wants to be the first at this point. In December NASA announced plans to build an international base on one of the poles of the Moon. The base is to be finished by 2024. Russia’s booster rocket maker, Energia, has a more ambitious program: to build a permanent manned base on the Moon by 2015. Russia says the base will be built to develop the industrial production of helium-3. U.S. specialists prefer not to say anything specific on the matter. To crown it all, China launched its first satellite to the Moon on October 24. China also intends to launch a lunar base and an unmanned space probe to the Moon by 2010. Non-radioactive isotope of helium, helium-3, is a powerful fuel for the nuclear synthesis. Only six tons of this fuel would provide enough energy to power a large European country for one year. The qualities of the gas (pollution-free and very high output) make many countries treat the perspective as seriously as possible. Germany, India and China conduct a number of research works to develop methods of helium-3 extraction. Hoagland and Johnston also intend to prove that NASA virtually acts as another defense department of the United States, entitled to classify important technical and scientific information without the control of the U.S. Congress. Hoagland says that American astronauts could secretly deliver samples of extraterrestrial technologies from the Moon to the Earth. The technologies, the scientist says, push world’s leading countries into a new lunar race. “Unlike the previous space race between the USSR and the USA, the new one will determine the life of every single human being on Earth,” Hoagland said. Hoagland and Johnston think that the USA deliberately intensifies shuttle launches in order to shut down the program ahead of schedule and start using new the spacecraft, Constellation, that will let the USA land on the Moon again. Richard Hoagland says that NASA conceals a number of other secrets, including the discovery of microbes on the surface of Mars. The discovery was supposedly made by unmanned space probe Viking in 1976.
Posted on: 2007/11/2 17:35
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Ju flera kockar ju mindre till gästerna..
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Re: AFP - Asia's space race heats up as China heads for moon
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China's lunar probe enters moon's orbit
Mon Nov 5, 2007 3:12am EST BEIJING (Reuters) - A Chinese lunar obiter entered the moon's orbit on Monday, 12 days after takeoff, a feat hailed as a new milestone in China's exploration of space. Chang'e One was given instructions to slow down by mission control when the probe was 200 km (124 miles) from the moon, so it could be captured by the moon's gravity, Xinhua news agency said. Chang'e One is scheduled to scan the lunar surface from Wednesday in preparation for an unmanned moon vehicle planned for 2012 and a manned landing within 15 years. Sun Laiyan, head of the China National Space Administration, hailed the probe as a new milestone in China's space program. "We are all very excited. The orbiter has completed all its moves perfectly... This marks the first step in exploring deeper space," Sun told state television. In 2003, China became only the third country after the former Soviet Union and the United States to launch a man into space aboard its own rocket. In October 2005, it sent two men into orbit and plans a space walk by 2008. But China's space plans have faced increasing international scrutiny. Fears of a potential space arms race with the United States and other powers have mounted since it blew up one of its own weather satellites using a ground-based missile in January. Japan plans to launch its first mission to land a spacecraft on the moon in the next decade -- a feat so far achieved only by the former Soviet Union and the United States. The Chang'e One, named after a legendary Chinese goddess who flew to the moon, blasted off on a Long March 3A carrier rocket on October 24 from the Xichang Satellite Launch Centre in the southwestern province of Sichuan. http://www.reuters.com/article/scienceNews/idUSPEK27816520071105
Posted on: 2007/11/5 10:44
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Re: AFP - Asia's space race heats up as China heads for moon
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Det här låter inget vidare - all eyes on China... sa jag för några år sedan här...
AFP - China to beef up presence in Antarctica Wed Nov 7, 2:24 AM ET China will send its largest research team to Antarctica in more than two decades and expand its facilities there in a major reassertion of its presence on the icy continent, state media said Wednesday. A team of 188 scientists and support personnel will leave next Monday for Antarctica, China's biggest single contingent since it first established a research base in 1985, the China Daily newspaper said, quoting state polar research officials. The team will join 189 construction workers who left on Tuesday to carry out comprehensive expansion projects at China's Changcheng and Zhongshan bases on the southern landmass. The researchers will fix a location for China's third Antarctic station, expected to be completed within two to three years on the highest point of the polar ice cap, an area near the south pole known as Dome A where temperatures plunge to minus 90 degrees Centigrade (minus 130 degrees Fahrenheit). Dome A rises 4,300 meters (14,100 feet) above sea level and the base there will be China's first inland Antarctic station. The existing two stations are near the more hospitable coast. Those two will be expanded by more than one-third, allowing Chinese scientists to increase their research activities. The work will also make the stations more environmentally friendly through use of advanced lighting and heating systems, new thermal insulation, and high-tech waste-disposal systems. Changcheng was founded in 1985 and Zhongshan in 1989 when eco-friendly building materials were not yet available, the paper quoted Wei Wenliang, head of the state Polar Research Office, saying. The report did not detail the cost of the plans. Since its economic emergence China has moved aggressively to invigorate scientific projects, including pouring money into a space programme that put the country's first astronaut in orbit in 2003 and led to the launch last month of its first lunar orbiting satellite. http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20071107/ ... rcticscience_071107072442
Posted on: 2007/11/7 22:39
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Re: AFP - Asia's space race heats up as China heads for moon
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1. FBI Thinks China Is Greatest Threat
Nov, 2007 The Federal Bureau of Investigation believes that China poses the greatest threat to the U.S. in terms of espionage - and that thousands of "front companies" in America have been set up to aid Chinese spying, according to the Maldon Institute. A new report from the respected think tank, titled "The Chinese Secret Intelligence Service," warns, "China's intelligence services today consist of a vast shadowy organization that employs approximately 2 million full- or part-time agents. "Federal officials in the United States, in numerous interviews during the past year, say and have said that there are more foreign spies operating in the United States than during the Cold War . . . "In size and numbers, no country now can equal the numbers of Chinese spies in our country." The report quotes David Szady, FBI assistant director for counterintelligence, who said in a recent interview that the Chinese spymasters "figured out that what they want is throughout the United States, not just embassies, not just consulates. It's a major effort." The Maldon Institute report states: "The FBI believes that for the next 10 to 15 years, China is the greatest threat to the United States. "The Bureau believes that today there are more than 3,000 'front' companies in America whose real job is to direct espionage efforts. Then there are thousands of Chinese visitors, students and business people: how many of them have tasks to perform for Beijing's Ministry of State Security?" A great deal of the FBI's information comes from the highest-ranking Chinese defector to arrive in Washington: Xu Junping, director of Strategy in Beijing's Defense Ministry. He claims that for five years he oversaw all operations against the U.S. and set up the business plans for the more than 3,000 Chinese companies launched to operate across the United States, according to the report. The report also intimates the success of the Chinese espionage: "An analyst in the Defense Intelligence Agency informed a colleague that during the past three years, the Chinese have stolen $24 billion worth of secrets, and that many of these items enabled Beijing to accelerate its space program . . . "The FBI also is following up on a number of investigative leads, such as who is funding individual Chinese students and which students, after graduation with a computer or other science degree, seek employment with a high-tech company." Editor's Note: Special Report: Forget China. This Is Asia's Next Tiger. http://news.newsmax.com/?yUY7GT2u2gFIogAyCiKfx6Q16Qy
Posted on: 2007/11/7 22:53
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Re: China plans to launch lunar probe
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HD video taget från månen av asiatiskt ursprung:
http://www.jaxa.jp/press/2007/11/20071107_kaguya_movie_e.html
Posted on: 2007/11/8 15:54
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Re: China plans to launch lunar probe
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Stewart Swerdlow, dillar om att man kan se aktivitet på månen, med vilket teleskop somhelst, nån som har kollat in la luna med ett?
Posted on: 2007/11/8 16:02
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Kreti och pleti är en i vardagligt bruk föraktlig beteckning för allehanda löst folk, den breda allmänheten, vem som helst, eller som det står i Nordisk Familjebok: ”personer utan börd, bildning eller samhällsställning.”
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Re: AFP - Asia's space race heats up as China heads for moon
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Quote:
Hoagland är den värsta snackepåsen som har funnits, det finns ingen som kan säga så lite, med så många ord som honom. Han har gett betydelsen av att mumla i skägget, en extra dimension. Helium 3, hahaha
Posted on: 2007/11/8 16:06
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Kreti och pleti är en i vardagligt bruk föraktlig beteckning för allehanda löst folk, den breda allmänheten, vem som helst, eller som det står i Nordisk Familjebok: ”personer utan börd, bildning eller samhällsställning.”
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Re: AFP - Asia's space race heats up as China heads for moon
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Gaston bry dig inte om steffo är den värsta "vakna " snackepåsen som har funnits, det finns ingen som kan säga så lite, med så många ord som honom.
Han är ute effter jidder har snar bråkat med alla , men jag är inte klar med honom :)
Posted on: 2007/11/8 16:28
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Re: AFP - Asia's space race heats up as China heads for moon
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Quote:
Ingen har nånsin blivit "klar" med mig, sista smällen blir min, jag lovar. Har lyssnat på¨Hoagland tills jag fick prickar på armarna, numera brukar det räcka med att nån nämner honom så börjar allergin komma. Jag har massor med interviuer med honom som medverkande. Han säger alltid, jag skall strax berätta hur det kommer sig med en viss sak, men sedan kommer inget, detta kan han göra om tre eller fler ämnen i samma interviu. Man blir galen. Han babblar och babblar. ![]()
Posted on: 2007/11/8 16:36
Edited by Steffo on 2007/11/8 16:52:15
Edited by Steffo on 2007/11/8 16:52:53 |
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Kreti och pleti är en i vardagligt bruk föraktlig beteckning för allehanda löst folk, den breda allmänheten, vem som helst, eller som det står i Nordisk Familjebok: ”personer utan börd, bildning eller samhällsställning.”
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Re: China plans to launch lunar probe
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China launches remote sensing satellite
"... be used for collecting data for crop yield estimate and disaster prevention..." Naivt, eller...? Som vanligt för media ut världens största propagandabyrås; Xinhuas ord,... shame on AFP. http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20071112/ ... acesatellite_071112071426
Posted on: 2007/11/12 13:57
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Särskrivning borde bötfällas
Det är aldrig för sent att ge upp - förrän det är för sent... |
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Re: China plans to launch lunar probe
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Dr. Michio Kaku - The Real Star Wars Project
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JophfMG65cc
Posted on: 2007/11/15 0:41
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Särskrivning borde bötfällas
Det är aldrig för sent att ge upp - förrän det är för sent... |
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Re: China plans to launch lunar probe
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Suck
![]() Kinas släppta foto, sitt första tagna säger de... /Dr Klot
Posted on: 2007/12/2 20:17
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Det finns bara EN sanning
Så farlig är vägen, att man aldrig ser stupet, man faller sakta, stilla och lugnt – i djupaste trygghet – uppbyggd av strunt! Jag kom, jag såg, jag vände åter |
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Re: China plans to launch lunar probe
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Reuters - China plans first space-walk
Tue Nov 20, 2007 4:05am EST BEIJING (Reuters) - China will launch three astronauts into space next year in its third manned rocket flight and broadcast its first space-walk live, local media reported on Tuesday. China in 2003 became only the third country to put a man into space using its own rocket after the former Soviet Union and the United States. It then sent two astronauts on a five-day flight on its Shenzhou VI rocket in Oct 2005. China planned to launch its third manned rocket, Shenzhou VII, into space in October 2008, according to a local newspaper report reproduced in the Shanghai Daily. "The (astronauts) will walk in space for the first time and each move will be broadcast live," the paper quoted Pang Zhihao, a researcher with the China Academy of Space Technology, as saying. The astronauts would be attached to a belt but would "walk as far as five meters", Pang said. China has also set a target of five years to have its next generation of carrier rockets ready for launch, the Beijing News said in a separate report. Last month, China announced it would build a new range of carrier rockets designed to send bigger satellites and potentially space stations into space. "The preliminary plan is to be able to put these rockets into operation after five years," the paper quoted Zhang Yanhe, deputy director of the Tianjin office of the Commission of Science Technology and Industry for National Defence, as saying. China would start building the rockets at the end of 2009, following completion of a 4.5 billion yuan ($606 million) manufacturing base in Tianjin, the paper said. China's space program has come a long way since late leader Mao Zedong lamented that the country could not even launch a potato into space. Its first lunar probe, Chang'e 1, reached its working orbit earlier this month, and the second stage of its lunar exploration project envisages a moon landing. It has also said it would work with Russia to send probes to Mars aboard a Russian rocket in 2009. (Editing by Nick Macfie and David Fogarty) http://www.reuters.com/article/scienceNews/idUSPEK25274720071120 ============================== Security SSL SSL PGP PGP PGP __________ NOD32
Posted on: 2007/12/2 21:27
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Det finns bara EN sanning
Så farlig är vägen, att man aldrig ser stupet, man faller sakta, stilla och lugnt – i djupaste trygghet – uppbyggd av strunt! Jag kom, jag såg, jag vände åter |
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Re: China plans to launch lunar probe
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AP - China says lunar image authentic
hehe... http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20071203/a ... sc/china_lunar_skeptics_3 http://www.reuters.com/article/techno ... ews/idUSPEK26275220071204
Posted on: 2007/12/4 12:22
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Det finns bara EN sanning
Så farlig är vägen, att man aldrig ser stupet, man faller sakta, stilla och lugnt – i djupaste trygghet – uppbyggd av strunt! Jag kom, jag såg, jag vände åter |
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Re: China plans to launch lunar probe
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Posted on: 2007/12/5 23:52
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Det finns bara EN sanning
Så farlig är vägen, att man aldrig ser stupet, man faller sakta, stilla och lugnt – i djupaste trygghet – uppbyggd av strunt! Jag kom, jag såg, jag vände åter |
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