China set to launch second space lab
September 15, 2016  08:38
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China is set to launch its second experimental space lab as part of its efforts to build a permanent space station as part of its ambitious space programme that aims for a manned space station by around 2022. 

China will launch its Tiangong-2 space lab from the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Centre in northwestern China's Gobi desert today.

The ambitious space programme aims for a manned space station by around 2022. 

Engineers have begun injecting propellant into the the Long March-2F T2 rocket, which will carry Tiangong-2 into space, said Wu Ping, deputy director of the manned space engineering office. 

"All systems are ready for lift-off," she said. 

"The launch of Tiangong-2 will lay a solid foundation for the building and operation of a permanent space station in the future," state-run Xinhua news agency reported. 

Once in space, the 8.6-tonne space lab will manoeuvre itself into an orbit about 380 kms above the Earth for initial on-orbit tests. It will transfer to a slightly higher orbit at about 393 kilometers above the Earth's surface before the Shenzhou-11 manned spaceship ferries two astronauts into space to dock with the lab.
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