The Shenzhou-6 spacecraft underwent its first orbit maintenance operation
early Friday morning to restore the vessel to its original trajectory.
The operation began at 5:56 a.m. Beijing time Friday during the spacecraft's
30th circle flight around the Earth and successfully restored the slightly
deviated vessel to its original trajectory acouple of seconds later, according
to Beijing Aerospace Command and Control Center.
The spacecraft, which blasted off Wednesday morning with two astronauts
onboard, had slightly deviated from its designed orbit and is moving a little
closer to the Earth due to gravity.
Shenzhou-6, China's second manned space flight, is designed to travel in a
circular orbit 343 kilometers above the Earth after the orbit shift from an
elliptical orbit in its fifth circle around the Earth.
Experts said the maintenance is a normal technical operation and similar
tasks are possible in the future in accordance with the spacecraft's orbiting
situations.
Shenzhou-6 is expected to travel in space for up to five days, exceeding the
time spent in space during China's first manned flight in 2003, when astronaut
Yang Liwei aboard Shenzhou-5 spacecraft stayed in space for nearly 21.5 hours.