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![]() THE TIMES October 08, 2003 China's spaceman secret revealed by travel agency ------------------------------------------------- From Oliver August in Beijing AS CHINA keeps the world guessing over the launch date for its first manned space mission, a travel agency seems to have blown the secret. According to the China Aviation International Travel Company, which is organising trips to see the lift-off, the Shenzhou 5 spacecraft will depart from its remote Gobi Desert base at 8am on October 15. Chinese officials have said only that the launch is to take place this month. Analysts have speculated that Beijing does not want to attract additional attention in case the rocket blows up in mid-air. Asked by The Times if he could estimate the launch date, a salesman at the travel company said: "Of course. On the 15th at eight o'clock in the morning." A Communist Party Central Committee plenary meeting ends the day before. The salesman said: "We will watch from a base 8km (five miles) away. President Hu Jintao will be 1km closer, so don't worry about safety." The travel company has taken out a £10,000 accident insurance policy for every member of its 60-strong group. This is included in the £500 price, as are transport, accommodation and subsistence. An additional charge is levied for karaoke singing, the salesman said. "As the rocket will only go up once," he said, "we will only stay for one night in the aviation city very close to the launch site." The Shenzhou 5, or "Divine Vessel", will carry one man into space for about 24 hours. He is to be chosen from a squad of 14 air force pilots and will have a choice of 20 meals prepared for weightless conditions. The 14 space pilots have been dubbed taikonauts. The Chinese for space is tai kong, meaning "too empty". The 14 men, whose identity is secret, all have at least ten years' flying experience, as well as university diplomas. They weigh an average of 60kg (9st 6lb) and are at least 1.70m (5ft 6in) tall. All are in their thirties and live in a new training centre outside Beijing after undergoing training in Russia. They are said to be of "high political quality". According to the Beijing Youth Daily, their space suits weigh about 9kg (20lb) and cost "as much as a luxury car". The taikonauts will have handguns and axes among their equipment in case they miss their landing site on the grasslands of Inner Mongolia and end up surrounded by tigers or sharks. The launch site is at Jiuquan Space Centre in Gansu province. The Shenzhou capsule is mounted on top of a Long March 2 rocket and has a passenger room of about six square metres to accommodate up to three taikonauts. An official said that there would be only one crewman to minimise the human risk. No experiments will be carried out on the flight...../more/ see : ===== http://www.timesonline.co.uk/newspap...845781,00.html |
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On Wed, 8 Oct 2003, Martin Postranecky wrote:
[quoting Oliver August in THE TIMES for October 8, 2003] The Shenzhou 5, or "Divine Vessel", will carry one man into space for about 24 hours. He is to be chosen from a squad of 14 air force pilots and will have a choice of 20 meals prepared for weightless conditions. [...] The taikonauts will have handguns and axes among their equipment in case they miss their landing site on the grasslands of Inner Mongolia and end up surrounded by tigers or sharks. The launch site is at Jiuquan Space Centre in Gansu province. I wonder whether they train for this? Mockup capsule is dumped into the water with a splash. Off pops the hatch. The bold taikonaut emerges, ax in one hand, pistol in the other. Then the simulation director barks, "Relase the sharks!" -- Bill Higgins | Barry: "Cats don't need GPS-- they know Fermilab | the world revolves around them." Internet: | Me: "Good sigfile quote, but I probably have | too many Barry Gehm sigfiles." | Barry: "There's no such thing | as too many Barry Gehm sigfiles!" |
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From Martin Postranecky:
THE TIMES October 08, 2003 China's spaceman secret revealed by travel agency ------------------------------------------------- snip According to the China Aviation International Travel Company, which is organising trips to see the lift-off, the Shenzhou 5 spacecraft will depart from its remote Gobi Desert base at 8am on October 15. I'd like to see them wait until the second week of December to do this launch. ~ CT |
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![]() "Bill Higgins" wrote in message al.gov... On Wed, 8 Oct 2003, Martin Postranecky wrote: [quoting Oliver August in THE TIMES for October 8, 2003] The Shenzhou 5, or "Divine Vessel", will carry one man into space for about 24 hours. He is to be chosen from a squad of 14 air force pilots and will have a choice of 20 meals prepared for weightless conditions. [...] The taikonauts will have handguns and axes among their equipment in case they miss their landing site on the grasslands of Inner Mongolia and end up surrounded by tigers or sharks. The launch site is at Jiuquan Space Centre in Gansu province. I wonder whether they train for this? Mockup capsule is dumped into the water with a splash. Off pops the hatch. The bold taikonaut emerges, ax in one hand, pistol in the other. Then the simulation director barks, "Relase the sharks!" I'm surprised Bill. You forgot the shark's with friggen LASERS ON THEIR HEADS! -- Bill Higgins | Barry: "Cats don't need GPS-- they know Fermilab | the world revolves around them." Internet: | Me: "Good sigfile quote, but I probably have | too many Barry Gehm sigfiles." | Barry: "There's no such thing | as too many Barry Gehm sigfiles!" |
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![]() Stuf4 wrote: From Martin Postranecky: THE TIMES October 08, 2003 China's spaceman secret revealed by travel agency ------------------------------------------------- snip According to the China Aviation International Travel Company, which is organising trips to see the lift-off, the Shenzhou 5 spacecraft will depart from its remote Gobi Desert base at 8am on October 15. I'd like to see them wait until the second week of December to do this launch. You mean after Burt Rutan's sub-orbital flight? |
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![]() Greg D. Moore (Strider) wrote: I'm surprised Bill. You forgot the shark's with friggen LASERS ON THEIR HEADS! "Ding-Dong" "Who is it?" "Mao's Long March Restaurant." "I didn't order any food from a restaurant..." (long wait) "Downed Taikonaut." "But the government said that Shenzhou was safely in orbit!" (long wait) "The government also said that you should send any criticisms you had of its policies straight to it during the 'Hundred Flowers' movement...the fact that you are still alive indicates that you obviously don't believe in everything that the government says....and rescuing a downed Taikonaut might be just the thing needed to keep your counterrevolutionary distrust of the government's news agencies from putting your head into a noose." (Door is frantically opened) "Landshark..." "Oh, thank Buddha...for a while there I thought I was really in trouble!" Pat |
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In article ,
Richard Schumacher wrote: You mean after Burt Rutan's sub-orbital flight? What suborbital flight? Probably not this year . . . http://science.slashdot.org/article....5&mode=thread& tid=134&tid=160 -- Herb Schaltegger, B.S., J.D. Reformed Aerospace Engineer "Heisenberg might have been here." ~ Anonymous |
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In article ,
Herb Schaltegger wrote: You mean after Burt Rutan's sub-orbital flight? What suborbital flight? Probably not this year . . . It's not clear that the part in the Slashdot piece about further flight tests slipping past the end of the year is anything more than somebody's speculation. Nothing has been seen from Rutan's crew to that effect, and people who know them are skeptical that it would take them that long. -- MOST launched 1015 EDT 30 June, separated 1046, | Henry Spencer first ground-station pass 1651, all nominal! | |
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Pat Flannery wrote:
Greg D. Moore (Strider) wrote: I'm surprised Bill. You forgot the shark's with friggen LASERS ON THEIR HEADS! "Ding-Dong" "Who is it?" "Mao's Long March Restaurant." "I didn't order any food from a restaurant..." (long wait) "Downed Taikonaut." "But the government said that Shenzhou was safely in orbit!" (long wait) "The government also said that you should send any criticisms you had of its policies straight to it during the 'Hundred Flowers' movement...the fact that you are still alive indicates that you obviously don't believe in everything that the government says....and rescuing a downed Taikonaut might be just the thing needed to keep your counterrevolutionary distrust of the government's news agencies from putting your head into a noose." (Door is frantically opened) "Landshark..." "Oh, thank Buddha...for a while there I thought I was really in trouble!" Pat Excellent...ooohh so excellent! |
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Greg D. Moore (Strider) wrote:
[snip] I wonder whether they train for this? Mockup capsule is dumped into the water with a splash. Off pops the hatch. The bold taikonaut emerges, ax in one hand, pistol in the other. Then the simulation director barks, "Relase the sharks!" I'm surprised Bill. You forgot the shark's with friggen LASERS ON THEIR HEADS! Hahaha...and with a successful space program, China will be able to hold the world for ransom for ..... ONE MILLION DOLLARS! [snip] |
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