Monday, September 29, 2008

CHINA’S FIRST SPACEWALK – AN EPIC JOURNEY TO THE UNIVERSE




On the Thursday evening of 25 September 2008 I sat motionless in front of the television in my Medan residence and watched the live telecast by CCTV9 of the launching of the Shenzhou7 spacecraft carrying 3 Chinese astronauts or taikonauts, namely Zhai Zhigang, Liu Boming and Jing Haipeng, all of 42 years old. The spaceship was sent into its designated orbit by the Long-March II-F rocket. The count down of 10 for the blast off from the launch pad at Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center in China’s Gansu Province took place exactly at 9.10pm Beijing time.

The historical spacewalk successfully performed by Zhai Zhigang was witnessed by the world as it was broadcast live on television. He slipped out of the orbital module of Shenzhou7 at about 4.43pm Beijing time on 27 September 2008. Accordingly, it lasted about 20 minutes on that Saturday afternoon.

The spacecraft circled the earth 46 laps and the 3 Chinese taikonauts returned to earth after 68-hour mission, and landed in Inner Mongolia at 5.38pm on 28 September 2008. The safe return on Sunday afternoon thus concluded the successful China’s first-ever spacewalk mission.

2 comments:

jmtan2007.blogspot.com said...

Actually the astronauts float in space. They don't walk. There's nothing to walk on. Space is empty even airless. Neil Armstrong didn't walk on the moon, he hopped on it. But the scientists like to use the word "walk". As a teacher, it's not an accurate word to describe both actions. Maybe bc float and hop do not sound so nice.
Bc man walked upright, he is more superior to the other creatures on earth. That's why they use 'walk'.
That's my 2 sen worth food for thought. Think about it.

jmtan2007.blogspot.com said...

China has come a long way from the brown jacketed and capped slogan shouting robotic Maoists to the modern day sophisticates wearing business suits and the latest fashions from the west. This great leap forward is vastly different from the one advocated by Chairman Mao, the Great Helmsman. His Cultural Revolution nearly destroyed China if not for Deng Xiaoping whose daring proposals saved China from the brink of disaster.