Shenzhou VI blasts off in eye of all nation
12/10/2005 17:28
As the countdown for the blastoff of China's second manned spacecraft
Shenzhou-6 continued steadily in the satellite launch center in Jiuquan in
Jiuquan in northwest China, all the nation held breath. "Fifty seconds, 30
seconds,..." read Guo Baoxin clearly and soberly. The 45-year-old ground control
commander had served to count down in seconds for China's spacecraft blastoffs
for five times. Thirty-five years ago, Hu Shixiang, then in Guo's post,
pressed a red button to launch China's first three-stage carrier rocket, Long
March I, which carried the country's first manmade satellite, Dongfanghong I,
into space. With 35 years passing by, the manual ignition has been replaced by
automatic ignition, and Hu has been promoted to the post of vice
commander-in-chief of the manned space program. At 8:59:10 a.m. on Oct. 12,
2005, the temperature at the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center was 3 degrees
Celsius, and wind blew at a speed of 6 to 8 meters per second, with the snow
before dawn leaving little trace. The four arms holding the carrier rocket for
the Shenzhou-6 in the middle were loosened, with the ground connection cut off
for all the systems of the spacecraft. The carrier rocket, Long March II F
which was tailored to Shenzhou-6, was waiting for its sixth flight. Two years
ago, at the same time and the same launch pad, the huge-powered rocket carried
China's first astronaut Yang Liwei into space, realizing a centuries-old dream
cherished by the Chinese people. Two hours and 45 minutes before the
blastoff, two astronauts for China's second manned space mission, Fei Junlong
and Nie Haisheng, stepped into the re-entry module of the spacecraft. As
planned, they will travel in space for five days and conduct laboratory
experiments, which will be the nation's first space experiments operated
directly by man in space. When the countdown timer stopped at the zero
second, the rocket was ignited, all parts for the Shenzhou-6 mission were
vitalized. China's top leaders, Wen Jiabao, Li Changchun and Luo Gan, watched
the whole process of the Shenzhou-6's liftoff and saw the astronauts off at the
launch site. Inside the Beijing Aerospace Command and Control Center,
graphics and digits were glittering. Four survey vessels on the Pacific,
Atlantic and Indian oceans and 9 land monitor stations were poised to receive
real-time messages about the flight conditions of the spacecraft. At the
Jiuquan command and control center, among the gazers in front of the monitors,
one was a bit special. He was China's first astronautic hero Yang Liwei. Four
seconds after ignition, the 479-ton spacecraft left the launch pad, and viewers
on the ground watched the movement through cameras, including one tied on the
rocket body. According to calculation by Liu Zhusheng, chief designer of the
carrier rocket system, to carry one kg of material into space, the rocket will
consume six kg of its weight. Since there are two astronauts in the current
mission, the Shenzhou-6 was the heaviest among China's all six space
vehicles. At the 12th second after ignition, the rocket, at a height of 211
meters above the ground, turned southeastward by a 4-to-5-degree angle, piercing
the sky with a bright white curve. At the 120th second, the rocket completed
its first separation movement, dropping off the 8-meter-high escape tower at its
top. It is reported that 70 percent of spacecraft accidents occurred at the
stage of launch, and that the first 120 seconds in the stage are the most
dangerous. The escape tower, chiefly designed by Zhang Zhi in seven years, would
carry the astronauts away in case any breakdown in the vessel with a time range
900 seconds prior to and 120 seconds after blastoff. Zhang sighed with a
relief when the escape tower dropped off and the rocket continued its flight at
a speed of more than 1,300 meters per second, four times of sound speed. At
the 136th second, the rocket discarded its four boosters at an altitude of 52
km. The beautiful separation was monitored by Guo Yi, a major ground operator,
through a big photoelectric telescope, at a radar station some 30 km from the
launch pad. At the 200th second, the 32 locks on the rectifier cover opened
simultaneously, and the cover dropped off to unveil the main body of the
spacecraft. At the 583rd second, the spacecraft separated from the rocket and
entered its orbit at an altitude of 200 km above China's Yellow Sea and with a
speed of 7.5 km per second. This was the 46th successful launch since October
1996, the Jiuquan and Beijing command and control centers were soaked in hails
and hugs. Amid the jubilation, the Shenzhou-6 had flied 2,000 km, covering five
provincial areas.
Xinhua news
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