China’s Tiangong space station research aims to ‘break technology choke points’

In its first performance review of the Tiangong space station, the China Manned Space Agency said on Monday that 181 experiments and application projects were conducted, and nearly 2 tonnes of scientific materials delivered, as of December 1.

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Looking ahead, the agency said China aims to break space technology choke points with thousands of experiments in Tiangong over the next 10 to 15 years intended to serve the nation’s crewed exploration programme.

One of the first panoramic shots of China’s Tiangong space station, taken by a Shenzhou-16 mission astronaut in October. Photo: CMSA
One of the first panoramic shots of China’s Tiangong space station, taken by a Shenzhou-16 mission astronaut in October. Photo: CMSA

“We aim to achieve major breakthroughs in important areas at the basic frontier of international science and achieve systematic knowledge … in applied fundamentals and new technologies,” it said.

“As a national space laboratory, China’s space station will carry out thousands of research projects over the next 10-15 years of operation.”

According to the report, research will focus on meeting demand for near-Earth and cislunar space – which lies between our planet and the moon’s orbit – as well as deep space exploration and orbital services.

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The agency is also eyeing technology breakthroughs in precision measurements, in-orbit construction, robots and automation, as well as propulsion and life support, to address choke points in space equipment.

“China’s space station will proactively expand global cooperation on space science and application … open scientific data, and set up a pattern of diversified cooperation,” the report said.

  

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