• Skip to content
  • Jump to main navigation and login

Nav view search

Navigation

Search

  • You are here:  
  • Home

This Site

  • Home
  • Newsletter
  • Chinese Space News
  • Contact Go-Taikonauts!
  • downloads
  • our partners
  • 6th CCAF - China (International) Commercial Aerospace Forum
  • SEE Universe - South East Europe Space Conference 2020

Pakistan 1st foreign nation to fully benefit from China’s BeiDou system

17 May 2017
After building the infrastructure needed to allow China's BeiDou Navigation Satellite (BDS) system to be fully used in Karachi, Pakistan's largest city, one company involved in developing the system is now looking to provide the satellite navigation service to more countries along the route taken by "One Belt One Road" initiative.
MORE...

Studying bone loss mechanism in space

17 May 2017
Researchers at Hong Kong Baptist University (HKBU) are conducting a study on board China's spacecraft Tianzhou-1 in order to understand the effect of the "CKIP-1" gene on bone formation under microgravity in space.
HKBU is the only higher education institution from outside of Mainland to conduct a scientific research project onboard Tianzhou-1. The HKBU team investigates the effect of the "CKIP-1" gene on bone formation under microgravity conditions in space.
MORE...

New Fund To Back Innovative Tech

17 May 2017
State-owned China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation (CASC) has teamed up with other government-owned companies for a 150 billion yuan ($21.78 billion) fund to invest in new technologies, the official Xinhua news agency said on 16 May. CASC is responsible for the development and launch of rockets, satellites, manned spacecraft and space stations as well as strategic missiles and other weapons. The innovation-focused fund will target an array of high-tech sectors, including aerospace, nuclear energy, shipping, high-speed rail, quantum communications, 3-D printing and robotics, CASTC General Manager Wu Yansheng said at the launch ceremony.
MORE...

Moon or Mars? Commercial or governmental? With or without China?

11 May 2017
At a panel discussion during the the Armstrong Space Symposium at the Ohio State University, the talk was centered on whether humans should venture next to the Moon or Mars, how to get there, and who will get there first. “I think there may be a confluence of events in the world today that will predicate another landing on the Moon, but it won’t be [by the United States],” Apollo 15 astronaut Al Worden said. “I think it might be China.” Apollo 17 astronaut Harrison Schmitt disagreed with that prediction, but he did agree that China has big ambitions in space. As to whether billionaire-funded companies like SpaceX, Virgin Galactic or Blue Origin will carry humans to space before any world governments do, former NASA administrator Michael Griffin asserted that commercial ventures “are not substitutes for national will…for a belief by our nation that we should be preeminent in space.”
MORE...

Page 425 of 436

  • Start
  • Prev
  • 420
  • 421
  • 422
  • 423
  • 424
  • 425
  • 426
  • 427
  • 428
  • 429
  • Next
  • End

Powered by Joomla!®