2002 Chinese uncrewed spaceflight
Shenzhou 4
(
Chinese
:
神舟四?
) ? launched on December 29, 2002 ? was the fourth uncrewed launch of the Chinese
Shenzhou spacecraft
. Two dummy astronauts were used to test the life support systems (a live astronaut was not used until
Shenzhou 5
on October 15, 2003).
The spacecraft was equipped for a crewed flight, even featuring a
sleeping bag
,
food
, and
medication
. The windows were constructed of a new material that was designed to stay clear even after reentry to allow an astronaut to confirm that the
parachutes
have deployed properly. It was said that the spacecraft flown on Shenzhou 4 had no major differences to that used on
Shenzhou 5
. It flew with the ability for manual control and emergency landing, systems needed for a crewed flight. A week before the launch, astronauts trained in the spacecraft to familiarise themselves with its systems.
Initially the spacecraft was in a 198 kilometres (123 mi) by 331 kilometres (206 mi) orbit inclined at 42.4°. This was raised to 330 kilometres (210 mi) by 337 kilometres (209 mi) at 23:35 UTC on December 29, 2002. On January 4 and January 5, 2003 several smaller manoeuvres were thought to have taken place. The rate of
orbital decay
seemed higher after January 1, suggesting that the orbital module's solar panels may have been deployed for the first time. Compared to
Shenzhou 3
the orbital period of Shenzhou 4 was much more tightly bounded with smaller manoeuvres.
The launch of Shenzhou 4 was watched by officials including Chairman of the
National People's Congress
Li Peng
; Vice Premier and member of the
Politburo Standing Committee
Wu Bangguo
;
Jia Qinglin
, also a member of the Standing Committee;
Cao Gangchuan
, vice-chairman of the
Central Military Commission
;
Song Jian
, vice-chairman of the
Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference
; and
Li Jinai
, head of the General Armament Department of the
People's Liberation Army
. According to the weather forecast, the launch site was -29°C.
[1]
The spacecraft carried 100
peony
seeds
to investigate the effect of
weightlessness
on plants grown from them. The 52 experiments onboard investigated areas in
physics
,
biology
,
medicine
,
earth observation
,
material science
, and
astronomy
.
Four tracking ships were used for the mission ? one off the coast of South Africa in the South Atlantic Ocean, one in the Indian Ocean near Western Australia, one in the North Pacific Ocean south of Japan, and one in the South Pacific Ocean west of New Zealand.
The reentry module landed safely about 40 kilometres (25 mi) from
Hohhot
,
Inner Mongolia
. As with previous flights, the command for reentry to begin was given by a tracking ship off the coast of South Africa. It was thought before the flight that the Chinese would attempt a
water landing
to test the emergency system but this did not happen. The orbital module remained in orbit until September 9, 2003.
See also
[
edit
]
References
[
edit
]
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Shenzhou missions
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Tianzhou missions
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Space stations
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Hardware
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Facility
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Related
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- Underline
indicates current missions
- Italics
indicates future missions
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January
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February
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March
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April
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May
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June
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July
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August
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September
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October
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November
| |
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December
|
- TDRS-10
- Hot Bird 7
,
Stentor
,
MFD-A
,
MFD-B
- ADEOS II
,
Kanta Kun
,
FedSat
,
μ-LabSat 1
(
RITE 1
,
RITE 2
)
- NSS-6
- TrailBlazer-2001 STA
,
Saudisat 1C
,
LatinSat A
,
LatinSat B
,
UniSat 2
,
Rubin 2
- Kosmos 2393
- Kosmos 2394
,
Kosmos 2395
,
Kosmos 2396
- Shenzhou 4
- Nimiq 2
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Launches are separated by dots ( ? ), payloads by commas ( , ), multiple names for the same satellite by slashes ( / ).
Crewed flights
are underlined. Launch failures are marked with the † sign. Payloads deployed from other spacecraft are (enclosed in parentheses).
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