Chinese astronaut in orbit takes historic step

This screenshot taken at Beijing Aerospace Control Center on Nov 7, 2021 shows Chinese taikonaut Zhai Zhigang conducting extravehicular activities (EVAs) out of the space station core module Tianhe. Taikonauts Zhai Zhigang and Wang Yaping have completed their EVAs and returned to the space station core module Tianhe, the China Manned Space Agency (CMSA) said on early hours of Monday. (GUO ZHONGZHENG / XINHUA)

BEIJING – Senior Colonel Wang Yaping, 41, became China's first female spacewalker on Sunday evening when she took part in the Shenzhou XIII mission's first extravehicular activity with mission commander Major General Zhai Zhigang.

The extravehicular operation began at 6:51 pm when Zhai opened a hatch. By 8:28 pm, Zhai and Wang had exited the Tiangong space station, the China Manned Space Agency said in a statement.

By midnight, they had mounted new components on the station's robotic arm and used it to practice extravehicular maneuvers and rescue operations, the agency said, noting that Senior Colonel Ye Guangfu had remained inside the station to monitor and support the spacewalk, which was scheduled to last six hours.

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In the early hours of Monday, the China Manned Space Agency (CMSA) announced that Zhai Zhigang and Wang Yaping have completed their EVAs and returned to the space station core module Tianhe at 1:16 am (Beijing Time) after completing a series of extravehicular tasks over 6.5 hours.

China launched the Shenzhou XIII spaceship on Oct 16, sending three taikonauts on a six-month mission to construct its space station

The event was the third extravehicular mission conducted during the construction of the country's space station and the first by the Shenzhou XIII crew. It also marks the first EVAs in Chinese space history involving a female taikonaut, said the agency, which has declared Monday's EVAs a complete success.

The mission further tested the functions of the China-developed new-generation extravehicular spacesuits, the coordination between the taikonauts and the mechanical arm, and the reliability and safety of supporting equipment related to the EVAs, said the CMSA.

China launched the Shenzhou XIII spaceship on Oct 16, sending three taikonauts on a six-month mission to construct its space station.  

A native of Shandong province and mother of a 5-year-old girl, Wang joined the People's Liberation Army Air Force in August 1997 and served as a deputy squadron commander before joining the second group of astronauts at the PLA Astronaut Division in May 2010.

In March 2012, she was part of the backup crew for the Shenzhou IX mission, and in June 2013, she took part in the Shenzhou X mission, which lasted nearly 15 days. She is the second Chinese woman to have flown in space.

During the Shenzhou X flight, Wang gave China's first space-based lecture inside the Tiangong I experimental module to more than 60 million Chinese students at about 80,000 schools across the country.

She was selected for Shenzhou XIII in December 2019 and was also a member of the backup crew for the Shenzhou XII mission.

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Zhai, 55, was the first Chinese astronaut to conduct a spacewalk — he floated out of the Shenzhou VII spacecraft for about 15 minutes during its three-day mission in September 2008.

In this screen image taken at Beijing Aerospace Control Center on Nov 7, 2021, Chinese taikonaut Wang Yaping conducts extravehicular activities out of the space station core module Tianhe. (GUO ZHONGZHENG / XINHUA)

This screen image taken at Beijing Aerospace Control Center on Nov 7, 2021 shows Chinese taikonauts Zhai Zhigang and Wang Yaping conducting extravehicular activities out of the space station core module Tianhe. (GUO ZHONGZHENG / XINHUA)

That short adventure made China the third nation in the world, following the former Soviet Union and the United States, capable of independently conducting a spacewalk.

The Shenzhou XIII mission was launched on Oct 16 by a Long March 2F carrier rocket that blasted off from the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center in northwestern China's Gobi Desert, with the crew soon entering the Tiangong space station, whose name means Heavenly Palace. They are scheduled to spend six months working in the station, making it China's longest space mission.

Chinese taikonaut Ye Guangfu works in the space station core module Tianhe in this screenshot taken at Beijing Aerospace Control Center on Nov 7, 2021. (GUO ZHONGZHENG / XINHUA)

Chinese taikonaut Wang Yaping (right) completing extravehicular activities in this screen image taken at Beijing Aerospace Control Center on Nov 8, 2021. (GUO ZHONGZHENG / XINHUA)

Before the spacewalk, they had moved living and work materials from the Tianzhou 2 and 3 cargo spaceships to the station's core module, named Tianhe, or Harmony of Heavens, tested their extravehicular suits, and conducted training on robotic arm control and medical aid, according to the manned space agency.

Their peers in the Shenzhou XII mission, which lasted three months and concluded in mid-September, performed two spacewalks.