This article was originally published atThe Conversation.The publication contributed the article to Space.com'sExpert Voices: Op-Ed & Insights.
Paulo de Souza, Professor, Griffith University
China's space program is making impressive progress. The country only launched itsfirst crewed flightin 2003, more than 40 years after the Soviet Union's Yuri Gagarinbecame the first human in space. China'sfirst successful Mars missionlaunched in 2020, half a century after the U.S. Mariner 9 probe flew past the Red Planet.
But the rising Asian superpower is catching up fast: flying missions to themoonandMars, launching heavy-lift rockets, building a newspace telescopeset to fly in 2024, and, most recently, putting thefirst pieceof the Tiangong space station (the name means"Heavenly Palace") into orbit.
In photos: Tiangong-1, China's space station fell to Earth
Tiangongis the successor to China's Tiangong-1 and Tiangong-2 space laboratories, launched in 2011 and 2016, respectively. It will be built on a modular design, similar to the International Space Station operated by the United States, Russia, Japan, Canada and the European Space Agency. When complete, Tiangong will consist of a core module attached to two laboratories with a combined weight of nearly 77 tons (70 tonnes).
The core capsule, named Tianhe ("Harmony of Heavens"), is about the size of a bus. Containing life support and control systems, this core will be the stations living quarters. At 25 tons (22.5 metric tonnes), the Tianhe capsule is the biggest and heaviest spacecraft China has ever constructed.
The capsule will be central to the space stations future operations. In 2022, two slightly smaller modules are expected to join Tianhe to extend the space station and make it possible to carry out various scientific and technological experiments. Ultimately, the station will include 14 internal experiment racks and 50 external ports for studies of the space environment.
Tianhe will be just one-fifth of the size of the International Space Station, and will host up to three crew members at a time. The first three "taikonauts" (as Chinese astronauts are often known) are expected to take up residence in June this year.
Tianhe was launched from China's Hainan island on April 29 aboard a Long March 5B rocket.
These rockets have one core stage and four boosters, each of which is more than 90 foot tall (nearly 28 meters tall) the height of a nine-story building and almost 10 foot wide (more than 3 meters). The Long March 5B weighs about 940 tons (850 metric tonnes) when fully fueled, and can lift a 28-ton (25 metric tonnes) payload into low Earth orbit.
During the Tianhe launch, the gigantic core stage of the rocket weighing around 22 tons (20 metric tonnes) spun out of control, eventually splashing down more than a week later in the Indian Ocean. The absence of a control system for the return of the rocket to Earth has raised criticism from the international community.
However, these rockets are a key element of Chinas short-term ambitions in space. They are planned to be used to deliver modules and crew to Tiangong, as well as launching exploratory probes to the moon and eventually Mars.
Despite leaving behind an enormous hunk of space junk, Tianhe made it safely to orbit. An hour and 13 minutes after launch, its solar panels started operating and the module powered up.
Tianhe is now sitting in low Earth orbit at the altitude of about 250 miles (400 kilometers), waiting for the first of the ten supply missions scheduled over the next 18 months that are required to complete the Tiangong station.
A pair of experimental modules named Wentian ("Quest for Heavens") and Mengtian ("Dreaming of Heavens") are planned for launch in 2022. Although the station is being built by China alone, nine other nations have already signed on to fly experiments aboard Tiangong.
To find out when the space station might be visible from where you are, you can check websites such asn2yo.com, which show the stations current location and its predicted path for the next 10 days. Note that these predictions are based on models that can change quite quickly, because the space station is slowly falling in its orbit and periodically boosts itself back up to higher altitudes.
The station orbits Earth every 91 minutes. Once you find the time of the stations next pass over your location (at night, you wont be able to see it in the daytime), check the direction it will be coming from, find yourself a dark spot away from bright lights, and look out for a tiny, fast-moving spark of light trailing across the heavens.
This article is republished fromThe Conversationunder a Creative Commons license. Read theoriginal article.
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China's Tiangong space station: What it is, what it's for, and how to see it - Space.com
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