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Asia Minute: China's Developing Space Program | Hawai'i Public Radio - Hawaiipublicradio

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Three Chinese astronauts were in quarantine Monday — not because of the coronavirus, but because of a recent space mission. On Friday they touched down in a desert in Mongolia, wrapping up a three-month mission.

China’s latest astronaut mission was in space three times longer than any of its previous space travel.

And there are plans for an even longer stay next time — as the country moves ahead with a broader space program.

China is in the process of putting together a space station. The first of three modules is now in place — about the size of a city bus — that’s where the crew spent the last 90 days.

The government wants to finish it by the end of next year.

The final facility will be about 20% the size of the International Space Station — a joint program involving the United States, Russia, Japan, Europe and Canada.

The International Space Station started to be assembled in 1998 — and last November celebrated 20 years of continuous human presence on board.

China is calling its space station “Tiangong” — or “Heavenly Palace.”

The country’s next crewed mission is expected to launch in about a month, with plans to keep the astronauts aboard until next spring.

At one point last week, the Chinese astronauts, a space station crew and the civilian crew of the latest SpaceX mission were all simultaneously aloft — setting a new record — with 14 people in space at the same time.

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September 21, 2021 at 02:31AM
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Asia Minute: China's Developing Space Program | Hawai'i Public Radio - Hawaiipublicradio
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