- Key People:
- Tim Peake
- Sigmund Jähn
- Ellen Ochoa
- Valentin Petrovich Glushko
- Related Topics:
- Tiangong
- Salyut
- crewed spacecraft
The first two Chinese Tiangong (“Heavenly Palace”) stations each consisted of an 8,500-kg (18,700-pound) cylinder that was 3.4 metres (11.2 feet) in diameter. It had two sections, a forward pressurized module that contained the astronauts’ living space and an unpressurized rear instrument module that contained Tiangong’s propulsion system. A pair of solar arrays attached to the instrument module provided power to the station. The launch vehicle was a Chang Zheng 2F/G (CZ-2F/G, or Long March 2F/G), a modified version of the CZ-2F, which was specifically developed for the Shenzhou program.
Tiangong 1 was launched on September 29, 2011. The uncrewed spacecraft Shenzhou 8 automatically docked with Tiangong 1 in November 2011. The first crewed mission, Shenzhou 9, arrived at Tiangong 1 in June 2012. Tiangong 2 launched on September 15, 2016. Only one crewed spaceflight, Shenzhou 11, visited Tiangong 2. Two astronauts stayed aboard the station for 33 days beginning in October 2016. The first in a series of uncrewed cargo spacecraft, Tianzhou 1, docked with Tiangong 2 in April 2017. Tiangong 1 and 2 reentered Earth’s atmosphere in April 2018 and July 2019, respectively.
A subsequent, larger Tiangong space station will have three modules: the core module, Tianhe, was launched in April 2021, and two science modules, Wentian and Mengtian, will follow. The first crewed mission, Shenzhou 12, carried three astronauts and docked with Tianhe in June 2021. The new space station is planned to share its orbit with the Xuntian space telescope to allow astronauts to easily repair and upgrade the telescope. Like Tiangong 2, the station will be serviced by Tianzhou spacecraft.
David M. Harland