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Chinese Astronauts Stranded In Space After Debris Hits Return Capsule

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A team of Chinese astronauts, part of the Shenzhou-20 mission, is currently stranded at the Tiangong space station after their return capsule was struck by space debris. The China Manned Space Agency (CMSA) announced on Wednesday (November 5) that the crew, consisting of commander Chen Dong, fighter pilot Chen Zhongrui, and engineer Wang Jie, was scheduled to return to Earth on Wednesday but will remain in space while engineers assess the damage and conduct risk evaluations.

The incident occurred just hours before the crew was set to depart. The CMSA is analyzing the situation to ensure the safety of the astronauts and has not yet provided details on the extent of the damage. If the return capsule is deemed irreparable, the Shenzhou-20 crew may use the Shenzhou-21 team's capsule to return to Earth, according to protocol.

The Shenzhou-20 crew has been aboard the Tiangong space station since April, conducting various tasks including scientific experiments and repairs. Their replacements, the Shenzhou-21 team, successfully docked with the station on October 31.
 
A team of Chinese astronauts, part of the Shenzhou-20 mission, is currently stranded at the Tiangong space station after their return capsule was struck by space debris. The China Manned Space Agency (CMSA) announced on Wednesday (November 5) that the crew, consisting of commander Chen Dong, fighter pilot Chen Zhongrui, and engineer Wang Jie, was scheduled to return to Earth on Wednesday but will remain in space while engineers assess the damage and conduct risk evaluations.

The incident occurred just hours before the crew was set to depart. The CMSA is analyzing the situation to ensure the safety of the astronauts and has not yet provided details on the extent of the damage. If the return capsule is deemed irreparable, the Shenzhou-20 crew may use the Shenzhou-21 team's capsule to return to Earth, according to protocol.

The Shenzhou-20 crew has been aboard the Tiangong space station since April, conducting various tasks including scientific experiments and repairs. Their replacements, the Shenzhou-21 team, successfully docked with the station on October 31.
Classic karma - what goes around literally comes around. China is responsible for irresponsibly creating more space debris than any other country.
 
Physical spacecraft and ISS designs are not open source
, as much of the technical documentation is restricted due to national security regulations like ITAR. However, NASA has made significant use of open-source principles for software, releasing many software projects under its own open-source license, and some older technical reports with detailed plans are publicly available

During the Obama administration, the
"Wolf Amendment" was enacted in 2011, which has since prohibited NASA from engaging in direct, bilateral collaboration with the Chinese government and China-affiliated organizations without explicit authorization from Congress and the FBI.


Chinese and American spacecraft docking systems are not currently compatible due to political restrictions, although China has indicated its future systems could be compatible with the International Docking System Standard (IDSS) used by the US and its partners. The Wolf Amendment, a US law passed in 2011, prohibits NASA from bilateral cooperation with China, making collaboration on docking impossible.

Some Chinese docking systems, like the one on the Tiangong-2 and the Shenzhou spacecraft, were based on the Russian APAS system, which is compatible with some older ISS systems.
However, this compatibility does not extend to modern US systems, and recent Chinese spacecraft are moving toward a system that could be compatible with IDSS, the modern standard used on the ISS, but political restrictions prevent this from being implemented.

I'd think for mutual safety and rescue docking would be compatible. And common communication frequencies and format.

Especially when we and the Chinese are on the Moon and maybe Mars.

Chinese space shuttle

1762511730467.jpeg


Original Dyna Soar design


1762511894582.jpeg

China got a big leg up in space.
 
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