Shenzhou 2

Shenzhou 2
Mission type Test flight
COSPAR ID 2001-001A
SATCAT № 26664
Mission duration 7 days 10 hours 22 minutes
Orbits completed 117
Spacecraft properties
Spacecraft type Shenzhou
Launch mass 7,400 kilograms (16,300 lb)
Start of mission
Launch date January 9, 2001, 17:00:03.561 UTC
Rocket Chang Zheng 2F
Launch site Jiuquan LA-4/SLS-1
End of mission
Landing date January 16, 2001, 11:22 UTC
Landing site Inner Mongolia
Orbital parameters
Reference system Geocentric
Regime Low Earth
Perigee 330 kilometres (210 mi)
Apogee 346 kilometres (215 mi)
Inclination 42.6 degrees
Period 91.3 minutes

Shenzhou missions
 Shenzhou 1 Shenzhou 3

Shenzhou 2 (Chinese: 神舟二号) launched on January 9, 2001, was the second unmanned launch of the Shenzhou spacecraft. Inside the reentry capsule were a monkey, a dog and a rabbit in a test of the spaceship's life support systems. The reentry module separated from the rest of the spacecraft after just over seven days in orbit, with the orbital module staying in orbit for another 220 days.

Shenzhou 2 tested the spacecraft much more rigorously than its predecessor Shenzhou 1. After being launched into a 196.5 by 333.8 km orbit, 20.5 hours after launch it circularised its orbit to 327.7 by 332.7 km. Around 1220 UTC on January 12 it once again changed its orbit to 329.3 by 339.4 km. A third orbit change came on January 15 328.7 by 345.4 km.

As well as the animal cargo, there were 64 different scientific payloads. 15 were carried in the reentry module, 12 in the orbital module and 37 on the forward external pallet. These included a microgravity crystallography experiment; animal species including six mice, and small aquatic and terrestrial organisms; cosmic ray and particle detectors and a gamma ray burst detectors. To test the radio transmitting systems taped messages were broadcast from the spacecraft.

The signal for retrofire was sent at about 1015 UTC on January 16 as the spacecraft passed over the South Atlantic Ocean off the coast of South Africa. It landed in Inner Mongolia at 11:22 UTC. No photos were released of the landing capsule leading to some speculation that the reentry was not completely successful, though this was denied by Chinese officials. The Swedish Space Center news site reported that an unnamed source said one of the connections from the capsule to the single parachute failed leading to a hard landing.

The mission of the orbital module continued until it was commanded to fire its rockets to initiate reentry on August 24. It reentered over the western Pacific Ocean between Easter Island and Chile.

Mission parameters

See also

References

External links