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Russia, China To Launch Ultraviolet Observatory In 2010

File photo: The rings of saturn as seen through an ultraviolet light.
by Staff Writers
Shanghai, China (RIA Novosti) Nov 08, 2006
An ultraviolet observatory Russia, China and other countries are building to explore the far reaches of space will begin operating by the end of the decade, Russia's top space official said Tuesday.

The project will involve putting into orbit a satellite fitted with a telescope to study the ultraviolet radiation of as yet invisible celestial bodies in our galaxy's far-flung corners. Ground facilities will monitor the bodies and process data transmitted by the satellite.

"The technological base is Russian throughout, and the Chinese side will contribute by placing the research instrument [the telescope] on board the station and getting a network of ground monitoring stations in the PRC up and running," said Russian Space Agency President Anatoly Perminov, who is on a visit to China as part of a governmental delegation headed by First Deputy Prime Minister Alexander Zhukov.

Building a lunar spacecraft is another collaborative space project being pursued by Russia and China, Perminov said. China will send the vehicle on its first orbit of the moon in 2007. Russia will join in three years later for an unmanned lunar mission to involve landing, taking photos and sampling soil.

China, which is seeking to raise its global clout through ambitions space programs, shows an increasing interest in Russia's vast expertise as a leading space power. It successfully launched its second manned space spacecraft carrying two Chinese astronauts into orbit in October 2005, just two years after launching the first one.

Both spacecraft - the Shenzhou VI and the Shenzhou V - were modeled on Russia's Soyuz, developed in the late 1960s.

Source: RIA Novosti

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Mikulski Applauds Hubble Announcement, Says Decision Is Right For America
Washington DC (SPX) Nov 02, 2006
Senator Barbara A. Mikulski (D-Md.) joined the staff at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md. in celebrating NASA Administrator Michael Griffin's announcement that there will be a critical space shuttle mission to service the Hubble Space Telescope.







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