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Oct
25 2007 China launches its first lunar orbiter China launches its first lunar orbiter
The Chang'e One satellite will spend a year studying the moon. BEIJING -- Half a century after the Soviet Union beat the United States to outer space, China blasted off its first lunar orbiter Wednesday, catapulting the Asian nation onto the front lines of a new space race aimed at giving it bragging rights as a rising world power.
With launch, China begins its lunar quest Los Angeles Times BEIJING — Half a century after the Soviet Union beat the United States to outer space, China blasted off its first lunar orbiter Wednesday, catapulting the Asian nation onto the front lines of a new space race aimed at giving it bragging rights as a rising world power. The Chang'e One satellite, named after a mythical beauty who flew to the moon, lifted off under cloudy skies in western China's Sichuan province aboard a Long March A3 rocket. It will spend a year circling and studying the lunar surface and laying the groundwork for the goal of making China the first Asian nation to put an astronaut on the moon. The liftoff was broadcast on state television, witnessed by government officials and about 2,000 space enthusiasts who paid about $100 each to see it on-site. This expensive technological spectacle was contrasted by the evacuation of thousands of farmers in nearby villages who had to temporarily put away their plows and walk away from their pigs as a safety precaution in case of an accident. Like hosting the Olympics, the lunar mission is a symbolic opportunity for China to boost national pride in the one-party state. "These things serve as a cohesive force for the whole nation," said Ivan Choy, a political scientist at the City University of Hong Kong. "Even if you don't believe in communism, at least you will try to accept that it is the leadership of the Communist Party that has made China strong and able to compete with the other superpowers." Beijing aspires to put an astronaut on the moon within 10 to 15 years, placing it ahead of Japan, which launched an unmanned moon orbiter last month, and India, which hopes to do the same in April. The Chinese launch of the Chang'e marks the beginning of a quest to land a moon rover, probably in 2012, and another one about five years later, to bring back soil samples. China says its intentions are peaceful, but its space ambitions startled the world in 2003 when it became the third nation, after the Soviet Union and the United States, to send an astronaut into space aboard its own rocket. Astronaut Yang Liwei's one-day journey around Earth was followed two years later by a flight by two astronauts who spent five days in space. Next year's planned mission is expected to carry three Chinese astronauts, known as taikonauts, who also could attempt the country's first spacewalk. Astronauts aboard the Apollo 17 were the last Americans on the moon, in 1972. "I personally believe that China will be back on the moon before we are," NASA Administrator Michael Griffin reportedly said in a lecture in Washington two weeks ago, marking the space agency's 50th anniversary, still a year away. On Wednesday, Griffin congratulated the Chinese and opened the door to joint lunar research. Christopher Kraft, flight controller for Apollo 11, the first manned mission to the moon, said that placing a spacecraft in orbit around the moon is a significant achievement. "It says they've got the capability of computing the orbital mechanics to get there" and achieve a stable orbit, he said by phone from Houston. "But the step between sending an unmanned probe and a manned spacecraft is a big one. At least an order of magnitude, if not two orders." It's also tremendously more expensive to keep human beings alive on a journey to the moon and back. "It remains to be seen if they have the technological knowledge and stick-to-itiveness" to go the rest of the way, he said. "If and when they do that, I'll tip my cap to them." (Source: http://www.chron.com/) Keywords:
orbiter rockets to moon
, Chinese rockets
, First Lunar Orbiter
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