Category: International

China's Shenzhou-10 Lands

China's Shenzhou-10 Lands

China’s three-person Shenzhou-10 crew returned to Earth just after 8:00 pm Eastern Daylight Time (EDT) tonight, June 25 (8:00 am June 26 Beijing time), completing a roughly 15 day mission.  They landed in Inner Mongolia as scheduled.

Nie Haisheng, Zhang Xiaoguang and Wang Yaping spent 13 of those days aboard the Tiangong-1 space station.  Wang, China’s second woman in space, taught a class to elementary and middle school students so China calls her their first teacher in space.   The crew also tested manual docking techniques and did a fly-around of the module before they returned to Earth today.   Apart from that, there was little news about their activities other than developing experience in living and working in space.

Shenzhou-10 Crew Departs Tiangong-1, Will Land Tonight EDT

Shenzhou-10 Crew Departs Tiangong-1, Will Land Tonight EDT

The Shenzhou-10 crew undocked from Tiangong-1 and made a fly-around of the space station overnight Eastern Daylight Time (EDT) and is now preparing to return to Earth.   The Chinese media say the landing will be “around 8:00 am Wednesday” Beijing time, which will be about 8:00 pm tonight (Tuesday, June 25) EDT.

Chinese media report that the crew performed a fly-around and redocked with Tiangong-1 in what they described as a first-ever procedure for their program.  This crew and its predecessor, Shenzhou-9, each performed manual undockings/redockings with Tiangong-1 so the “first” apparently refers to the fly-around.   China is also reaffirming that this is the last crew to visit the module, which now will be placed into “a higher orbit for long term flight.”  

The small space station was launched in September 2011 and visited by the automated Shenzhou-8 spacecraft for rendezvous and docking tests that year.   In 2012, the three-person Shenzhou-9 crew became China’s first space station crew, as well as the first Chinese space crew with a woman (Liu Yang).

The current Shenzhou-10 crew also includes a woman, Wang Yaping, along with two men, Nie Haisheng and Zhang Xiaoguang.  They were launched on June 11 and boarded the space station on June 13.

China did not announce a precise landing time, but Bob Christy at zarya.info calculates that it will be on June 26 at 00:07 GMT plus or minus 5 minutes.  That is 8:07 pm tonight, June 25, EDT.

 

China's President Talks to Tiangong-1 Crew, Still No Official Word on Landing

China's President Talks to Tiangong-1 Crew, Still No Official Word on Landing

China’s President Xi Jinping spoke with the three Shenzhou-10 astronauts today as they orbited Earth in the Tiangong-1 space station.   China still has not announced when the trio will return to Earth, but the expectation is that it will be in a day or two.

President Xi told the crew via videoconference that “The space dream is part of the dream to make China stronger. With the development of space programs, the Chinese people will take bigger strides to explore further in space.”   China has been saying for several years that its next goal in human spaceflight is a 60-ton space station by 2020.  Xi did not mention that or any other specific goal today.

Chinese President Xi speaking to Shenzhou-10 crew June 24, 2013. 
Photo Credit:  China Daily (http://usa.chinadaily.com.cn/china/2013-06/25/content_16653623.htm)

Maj. Gen. Nie Haisheng, Col. Zhang Xiaoguang and Maj. Wang Yaping were launched on June 11 on what China said would be a 15-day mission.  They docked with Tiangong-1, a small (8.6 metric ton) space station, on June 13 and conducted a manual undocking/re-docking exercise yesterday and then reentered the space station.

China still has not announced exactly when they will return.  Bob Christy at zarya.info has calculated a potential landing time based on their current orbit, but it is only an estimate.

Shenzhou-10 Completes Manual Docking Test, Crew Readies for Return to Earth

Shenzhou-10 Completes Manual Docking Test, Crew Readies for Return to Earth

China’s three-person Shenzhou-10 crew tested manual docking techniques with the Tiangong-1 space station this morning (Beijing time) as their two-week mission nears its end.

Maj. Gen. Nie Haisheng was at the controls as Shenzhou-10 undocked and then redocked with Tiangong-1 in a test similar to one conducted last year by the Shenzhou-9 crew.   Both spacecraft initially docked with Tiangong-1 automatically, but China wants to demonstrate that manual dockings are an alternative. The test began with undocking at 8:26 am Beijing time today (Sunday) and redocking at 10:07 am (8:26-10:07 pm Eastern Daylight Time Saturday).  After redocking, the crew reentered the space station.

The Chinese English-language media have provided little information on what Nie and his two crew mates — Zhang Xiaoguang and Wang Yaping — have been doing during their stay on Tiangong-1.  They docked on June 13, two days after launch.  Only two stories made headlines in Xinhua, China’s official news agency, and other English-language Chinese media sources: they laid a new floor in Tiangong-1 using “innovative techniques,” and Wang, China’s second woman in space, taught a science lecture to elementary and middle school students.

The manual docking test and the lecture were the two mission objectives highlighted when the crew was launched on June 11.   Otherwise, they apparently are gaining in experience in living and working in space. 

China said at the time of launch that this would be a 15-day mission, making landing on June 25 or 26.   It has not officially announced a landing time.  Bob Christy at zarya.info calculates they will land at 00:09 GMT (plus or minus 5 minutes) on Wednesday, June 26.   That would be 8:09 pm Tuesday, June 25, Eastern Daylight Time.

 

 

 

Chinese "Teacher in Space" Gives Lecture, Says No UFO Sightings Yet

Chinese "Teacher in Space" Gives Lecture, Says No UFO Sightings Yet

The Chinese media have provided scant news about what their three astronauts are doing aboard the Tiangong-1 space station, but today their official press service, Xinhua, is full of stories about Wang Yaping giving a lecture to 330 primary and middle school students in Beijing. Another 60 million students and teachers reportedly watched on TV.

China has been calling her their first “teacher in space” because of this 40 minute lecture.  The lessons involved a variety of topics such as weightlessness, gyroscopic motion, and pendulum movement.

Xinhua quotes her as telling the students “Through the front windows, we can see the Earth and many other stars, but up till now, we haven’t seen any UFOs.”

The crew was launched on June 11 aboard Shenzhou-10 and entered the small space station two days later.  Along with Maj. Wang are Maj. Gen. Nie Haisheng  and Col. Chang Xiaogang.  This is Nie’s second spaceflight. Many western media sources refer to Chinese astronauts as taikonauts; the Chinese English-language media call them astronauts.

It is a 15-day mission, which would put landing around June 26, but no specific time or date has been announced.  Other than this space lesson and a test of manual docking techniques, China has made only general statements about the crew’s tasks, which seem to involve continuing to determine how astronauts live and work in space.   They also installed a new floor using “innovative techniques” in Tiangong-1, an 8.5 metric ton module that hosted the Shenzhou-9 crew last year.

Wang’s science lecture from space is one of the highlights of the mission.  Wang is not a teacher by training (she is a transport aircraft pilot), as were those who participated in NASA’s Teacher in Space program.   Christa McAuliffe, the first Teacher in Space, perished in the 1986 space shuttle Challenger tragedy.  Her backup, Barbara Morgan, later joined NASA as an “educator astronaut” and flew on STS-118 in 2007. 

The Chinese media published a letter from Morgan to Wang dated June 13 and a reply email from Wang to Morgan today.  Morgan’s letter says she sends “greetings of honor and love” on behalf of teachers and students around the world — “we are proud of you.”   Wang’s reply thanks her and says “We would like to join the efforts, as you have done, to bring science-loving youth around the world closer to their dreams of exploring the universe.”

House Hearing Shows Opposition to Asteroid Mission, Divisions on Draft Bill

House Hearing Shows Opposition to Asteroid Mission, Divisions on Draft Bill

The House subcommittee hearing on a draft 2013 NASA Authorization Act this morning showed continued skepticism about or opposition to the Obama Administration’s proposed asteroid initiative.  It also revealed that even some Republicans on the subcommittee object to certain provisions of the draft bill.

Rep. Steve Palazzo (R-MS), chairman of the Space Subcommittee of the House Science, Space and Technology Committee, began the hearing by praising the committee’s outreach efforts in drafting the bill saying that it was the result of “input from a wide variety of interests throughout the science and space communities.”   Somewhat surprisingly then, not only did subcommittee Democrats and both witnesses — NASA Advisory Council Chairman Steve Squyres and retired industry executive Tom Young — express deep reservations about the bill, but the subcommittee’s vice chairman, Rep. Mo Brooks (R-AL), said he “may have to oppose it.”  

Brooks’s complaint is the $1.4 billion for the Space Launch System (SLS) included in the bill is insufficient.  He read from an email sent by former NASA Administrator Mike Griffin and a letter from an unnamed former NASA official both insisting that a minimum of $1.8 billion is needed for that program.  SLS is being built at Marshall Space Flight Center, which Brooks represents.

The total amount of funding provided by the bill is $16.865 billion for FY2014 and for FY2015.  A provision in the bill says that if Congress repeals or replaces the sequester and additional funds become available, they are to be spent 50 percent for the International Space Station (ISS), 25 percent for commercial crew, and 25 percent for SLS.

Not everyone on the committee is a fan of SLS, however.   Rep. Dana Rohrabacher (R-CA), vice chairman of the full committee and a strong supporter of commercial space, called it the “SLS Titanic,” saying it is not sustainable and will drain money from everything else.  He asked Squyres, who is best known as the principal investigator for the Mars rovers Spirit and Opportunity, if SLS is a prerequisite for sending people to Mars.  Squyres said that some sort of heavy lift rocket is needed, but his main concern is that NASA is being asked to do too much with too little:  “We can afford to utilize the space station…. We can afford to develop SLS and to do it on a safe and reasonable schedule. But I don’t see that we can do both.”  Squyres also expressed concern about the low launch rate expected for SLS — perhaps one launch every two years — an issue he has emphasized in the past

Later, Rep. Bill Posey (R-FL) asked Squyres and Young when we could send people to Mars if we started right now.    Squyres asked “with the current budget?” and then turned to Young, who quickly responded “never.”  Squyres added “I agree.”

The draft bill would set in law a policy that the goals of NASA’s human spaceflight program are human missions to lunar orbit, the surface of the Moon and the surface of Mars, “and beyond” and require NASA to establish a program for a sustained human presence on the Moon and the surface of Mars.  NASA would be required to develop a Mars Human Exploration roadmap within one year and specific details of that roadmap are spelled out.    It also includes details about ISS utilization and the commercial crew program, including setting a deadline of December 31, 2017 for a flight readiness demonstration by when one or more commercial crew partners will have successfully transported astronauts to the ISS.

The hot topic in human spaceflight right now, however, is NASA’s proposal to send a robotic probe to capture an asteroid, direct it into lunar orbit, and send astronauts to study it and return a sample.   The terms Asteroid Return Mission, Asteroid Retrieval Mission, and Asteroid Redirect Mission are used interchangeably to refer to this concept and dubbed ARM.  ARM is part of an Asteroid Initiative that in turn is part of an Asteroid Strategy.   NASA held a half-day meeting yesterday to make the case for the initiative (see the video on YouTube), which would involve the public in searching for asteroids.  NASA also issued a Request for Information (RFI) to solicit ideas on how to carry out ARM.  Replies are due by July 18, 2013.

The draft bill, however, specifically prohibits NASA from spending any funds on ARM, and no Members or witnesses defended the concept.   As he has said previously, Squyres believes the human spaceflight program should be focused on sending people to Mars and does not see that ARM advances that goal.  At the hearing today he added that NASA should be allowed to make its case, but “I haven’t heard it yet.”  Young said that whatever resources are provided to NASA should be spent on “highest priority endeavors” and in his judgment ARM is not one of them.

The top Democrats on the full committee, Rep. Eddie Bernice Johnson (D-TX), and subcommittee, Rep. Donna Edwards (D-MD), listed a number of concerns about the draft bill.  Edwards said that it appears to “shift the emphasis of NASA’s core mission to human spaceflight” rather than the multi-mission agency NASA is required to be under the 1958 NASA Authorization Act (as amended).  Johnson said the bill creates “unfunded mandates” and despite putting NASA’s budget “on a path of declining purchasing power for the foreseeable future, it … directs NASA to establish major new programs — not just goals — for sustained human presences on both the Moon and Mars.”

Johnson and Edwards objected to the $16.865 billion funding level — a cut of almost $1 billion from the request of $17.715 billion (the amount is level with what NASA received for FY2013 after adjustments for the sequester) — and to dramatic cuts to NASA’s Earth science budget and reductions to space technology.  In the bill, Earth science would receive $650 million less than the FY2014 request, a one-third cut, and Edwards said space technology is focused only on exploration goals.  She and Johnson noted that the subcommittee had not heard from the Earth science or space technology communities and called for hearings on those topics.

Johnson decried the “arbitrary” deadline for the commercial crew flight demonstration, arguing that it evokes the “schedule pressure” that the Columbia Accident Investigation Board (CAIB) warned against in its review of the space shuttle Columbia tragedy.  

“This is not a bill ready for markup,” Johnson asserted, and “will be DOA in the Senate.”   

Less than an hour later, Senator Bill Nelson (D-FL), chairman of the companion subcommittee in the Senate, said exactly that in remarks to a Space Transportation Association luncheon.   He vowed that he would not accept a budget level of $16.8 billion for NASA, saying it “would run NASA into a ditch.”  He particularly objected to the proposed cuts to Earth science.   He said that the full Senate Commerce Committee hopefully will mark up its version of a NASA authorization bill by mid-July, but hinted that it might be a partisan debate.

As for the House bill, one area where everyone did seem to agree is that the Obama Administration’s proposed reorganization of Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) education programs is unacceptable.  Palazzo called it “poorly conceived” and “not ready for implementation.”  The draft bill would retain the current funding and structure of education programs in NASA.  Squyres called the administration’s proposal “deeply misguided.”

Except for that issue, however, there seemed little agreement on what the bill should say.  Squyres and Young expressed many reservations about other aspects of the bill, as well, particuarly stressing that  NASA should be allowed to deal with the technical aspects of programs rather than setting detailed requirements in legislation.  In reply to Rep. Steve Stockman (R-TX), they both also said that the White House Office of Management and Budget (OMB) is too deeply involved in “minute” details of NASA programs.  Squyres said that in the past OMB and Congress set high level goals, while NASA implemented programs, but the “level of detailed oversight” today is “unprecedented” and “detrimental” to the agency.

A webcast of the hearing, opening statements by Palazzo, Johnson and Edwards, and prepared statements by the witnesses are on the Republican and Democratic committee websites.

 Correction:  An earlier version of this article mistakenly stated that the total amount authorized in the bill was $16.845 billion instead of $16.865 billion.

Space Policy Events of Interest for the Week of June 17-21, 2013

Space Policy Events of Interest for the Week of June 17-21, 2013

The following space policy events may be of interest in the week ahead.  The House and Senate are in session this week.

During the Week

Among the highlights this week is a tribute to Sally Ride on Tuesday at the Griffith Observatory in Los Angeles.  Tuesday is the 30th anniversary of Ride becoming the first American woman in space.   Today (Sunday, June 16) is the 50th anniversary of Valentina Tereshkova becoming the first woman in space, and though the Soviets put a woman in space 20 years before the United States, they have launched only two other women since that time while female U.S. astronauts have become so commonplace that few take notice.  Ride died last year, but she and other countries’ first women in space, including Tereshkova, are being highlighted in events and the media in a celebration of 50 years of women in space.

Separately on June 18, NASA will hold a half-day forum on its proposed Asteroid Return Mission (ARM) where White House and NASA officials will explain what they plan to do.  On Wednesday, June 19, the House Science, Space and Technology Committee will hear from NAC Chairman Steve Squyres and veteran industry expert Tom Young on the NASA Authorization Act of 2013, which may decide whether the ARM is approved by Congress or not.

Monday, June 17

Monday, June 17 – Sunday, June 23

Tuesday, June 18

Tuesday-Thursday, June 18-20

Wednesday, June 19

Thursday, June 20

Friday, June 21

 

 

Nixon Legacy: Space Exploration as "Normal" Part of National Life

Nixon Legacy: Space Exploration as "Normal" Part of National Life

At a June 13 event at the National Archives, space policy expert John Logsdon described how President Nixon’s policy toward space exploration was rooted in framing it as a “normal” part of national life, not something special – a legacy that has influenced the U.S. space program for the last 40 years.

Logsdon, professor emeritus at George Washington University, joined NASA Chief Historian Bill Barry and the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum’s Roger Launius in an event that considered the space program under the presidential administrations of Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford.

Logsdon recounted how when Nixon arrived at the White House, there was a “clear need for decisions” when it came to the space program: what to do in the post-Apollo era. To inform this decision, Nixon created the Space Task Group in 1969, chaired by Vice President Spiro Agnew, that recommended a variety of timelines for an aggressive effort that included development of a space shuttle, a space station, and human spaceflight missions to Mars by 1986, at the latest.

Yet despite having “wrapped himself up” in the euphoria of the Apollo 11 mission, Nixon was not interested in spending money at the pace required to achieve such an ambitious program, Logsdon said.  Instead, he assumed a policy that turned space from being something special to a part of normal life – a policy that Logsdon argues has guided the space program for the last 40 years.

Nixon’s attitude is best captured in a statement he made in March 1970: “we must think of [space activities] as part of a continuing process…and not as a series of separate leaps…what we do in space from here on in must become a normal and regular part of our national life and must therefore be planned in conjunction with all of the other undertakings which are important to us.”

When the time came to decide on the post-Apollo space program, this attitude had a definite influence.  According to Logsdon, Nixon had been “traumatized” by the near-tragic accident of Apollo 13, which turned him away from the idea of return trips to the Moon.  As the 1972 elections loomed, Nixon made the decision to approve the Space Shuttle, a decision that resulted from his belief that the United States should strive for something new in space as well as wanting to avoid the electoral risk of post-Apollo aerospace unemployment.

“Nixon was certainly not going to be the person that took the United States out of the human spaceflight business,” said Logsdon.  His decision to move forward with the Shuttle – the sole element that survived from the ambitious program contained in the Space Task Group’s recommendations, and which was integral to what became the International Space Station — would come to define the direction of the U.S. human spaceflight program.

Before the Shuttle made its first flight in 1981, however, a hallmark event of international cooperation took place: the July 1975 Apollo-Soyuz Test Project (ASTP).  Barry focused on the developments on the Soviet side that explained the shift from competition to cooperation following the race to the moon.  ASTP took place during the Ford administration, but was a Nixon initiative, and represented the end of an era, rather than a beginning, Barry said.  The next cooperative flight would not happen until after the end of the Cold War in the 1990s.  Interestingly, Barry noted that the cooperative practices developed for ASTP were resurrected 20 years later.

Considering the legacies of the Nixon-Ford years is more than just an interesting historical exercise.  According to Launius, who spoke about the role that space has had in U.S. culture, there is now a need to revisit and move on from the decisions made 40 years ago. With the last Shuttle flight already two years in the past and the debate over what to do next still open, Launius argued that the core question facing this generation is why to go into space. With fiscal constraints looming far into the future and a U.S. general public that has never been supportive of expensive human spaceflight missions – even during the Apollo era, as Launius demonstrated based on his research of public opinion polls over the decades — perhaps a related and important question is just how special space will be in the next several decades.

The event was part of the National Archives’ celebration of the centennials of both Nixon and Ford.   An exhibit on “Nixon and the U.S. Space Program” will be on display at its main building in Washington, D.C. through the end of June.

UPDATE:  A webcast of the event is posted on Ustream

Shenzhou-10 Crew Enters Tiangong-1

Shenzhou-10 Crew Enters Tiangong-1

The three person crew of Shenzhou-10 docked with and entered the Tiangong-1 space station today, beginning a roughly two-week stay.

China’s official news service Xinhua reports that docking took place at 1:18 am Eastern Daylight Time (1:18 pm Bejing time; 05:18 GMT) and the hatch was opened at 4:17 am EDT (4:17 pm Beijing time; 20:17 GMT).  Several western sources, however, say docking was a few minutes earlier (1:11 am EDT). 

The three person crew includes Maj. Gen. Nie Haisheng, making his second spaceflight; Col. Zhang Xiaoguang; and Maj. Wang Yaping, China’s second woman in space.  They are two days into a 15-day mission that includes conducting experiments aboard Tiangong-1, Wang teaching a physics class, and a manual docking test.

Shenhzou-10 crew.  Photo Credit:  Xinhua

China Launches Shenzhou-10 Crew to Tiangong-1 Space Station

China Launches Shenzhou-10 Crew to Tiangong-1 Space Station

China successfully launched the Shenzhou-10 spacecraft this morning Eastern Daylight Time (EDT), sending a three-person crew to its Tiangong-1 space station.

Launch from the Jiuquan Space Launch Center took place on time at 5:38 am EDT (5:38 pm Beijing time, 09:38 GMT). 

Launch of Shenzhou-10, June 11, 2013.   Photo credit:  Xinhua

The crew includes China’s second woman in space, Maj. Wang Yaping.   She was a transport aircraft pilot before joining the astronaut corps.   The Chinese are heralding her as China’s first “teacher in space,” comparing her to Christa McAuliffe and Barbara Morgan, because she will teach a physics class from orbit.  She is 33 and China also is trumpeting her as the first astronaut born “in the 1980s” (she was born in 1980).

The other two crew members are Maj. Gen. Nie Haisheng and Col. Zhang Xiaoguang.  Nie, a pilot, is making his second spaceflight.  He was a member of the Shenzhou-6 crew in 2005.  He is 48.    Zhang, 47 and also a pilot, was born in 1966.   All are members of the Communist Party of China and of the People’s Liberation Army.

Shenzhou-10 crew.  Photo credit:  Xinhua

The Shenzhou-10 mission is scheduled for a total of 15 days.  Bob Christy at Zarya.info calculates that docking with the Tiangong-1 space station will take place on June 13 at 05:10 GMT (1:10 am EDT).   Part of the mission is to test manual docking procedures where the crew will undock and redock with the space station.  Christy shows that exercise taking place on June 20.  A final undocking and landing is expected on June 25 according to his timeline, but with the note that it may be June 26 instead.