Chinese women astronauts will soon be reaching for the stars along with
their male counterparts, an official with China's space program said last night.
They will embark on a space mission no later than 2010, working as flight
commanders or on-board engineers, Hu Shixiang, deputy chief commander of China's
Manned Space Program, told China Daily.
The selection process, to formally start in 2006, will choose at least four
women astronauts, but will not necessarily favor professional pilots, Hu said
while attending a reception for three American astronauts, who arrived in
Beijing last week.
This year China's air force has selected around 30 women pilots, some of
whom are reportedly intended to be future astronauts.
"It is true women aviators have some advantages in terms of flight
experience and physique, but we need payload experts with strong science and
engineering background to do experiments in outer space," he added.
That means China will focus on women with science and education backgrounds
when looking for candidates, Hu said.
The scenario contrasts with the selection of China's first group of male
astronauts, including Yang Liwei, who conducted China's maiden manned space
flight nearly two years ago. Yang and his 13 colleagues, all former fighter
pilots, are preparing for the country's second manned space flight, scheduled
for this autumn.
"The life support and environment control systems of our launch vehicles
and spacecraft will allow average people, who are physically adequate and with
some training, to fulfill space missions," Hu said.
In the near future, the norm will be for Chinese astronauts, men and women,
to work together as partners in journeys to outer space, he said.
He did not specify what kind of missions they would conduct together.
Astronaut Yang said "it is the norm" for countries to include women in
their space program. He did not elaborate.
Zhang Qingwei, president of the China Aerospace Science and Technology
Corp, said that with the development of China's manned space program, the
country will increase scientific research in orbit. Women specializing in
medicine, new materials, biology and other disciplines will all have the chance
to become astronauts.
Mae C Jemison, one of three visiting US astronauts, told China Daily:
"China should have women astronauts as soon as possible, even earlier than next
year, because you lose out on 50 percent of the talent that are available if you
don't have women included."
Jemison, who became NASA's first black woman astronaut in 1987, said she
had full confidence in the talent of Chinese women, not only in terms of
operating space vehicles, but also in terms of designing the vehicles and
understanding how space research can be most beneficial.
Jeffrey B Greene, president of the Sino-American Aviation Heritage
Foundation, which hosted the US astronauts' China tour along with the Chinese
Society of Astronautics, yesterday said he hoped Chinese and American crews
would one day fly together in the same spacecraft for peaceful space
exploration.
The astronauts' tour, lasting until August 3, was sponsored by the Du Pont
China Co.
(Source: China Daily, Jul. 26, 2005)