
When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission.
Three Chinese astronauts finally have a reliable way to get home from orbit.
The uncrewed Shenzhou 22 spacecraft arrived at Tiangong space station today (Nov. 25) at 2:50 a.m. EST (0750 GMT and 3:50 p.m. Beijing time), about 3.5 hours after launching to orbit atop a Long March 2F/G rocket.
Shenzhou 22 is an unprecedented mission for China — an emergency flight mounted on a short timeline to help out three astronauts who have been "stuck" on Tiangong for the past 10 days.
Those astronauts arrived at the station Oct. 31 for a six-month stay. Their mission, Shenzhou 21, took over from the three-astronaut Shenzhou 20 flight, which was scheduled to come home on Nov. 5.
But things got complicated when Shenzhou 20's departure was delayed after inspections revealed a crack in the window of the crew's return spacecraft. The damage, likely inflicted by a space debris strike, made the Shenzhou 20 vehicle unfit to carry astronauts on the harrowing trip down through Earth's atmosphere, Chinese space officials determined.
So, the Shenzhou 20 trio came home in the newly arrived Shenzhou 21 spacecraft, touching down safely on Nov. 14. That solution solved one problem but created another, leaving the Shenzhou 21 crew without a safe way to get home in the event of an emergency.
China is prepared for such eventualities, however. The nation keeps a backup Long March 2F/G rocket and Shenzhou capsule in a state of near-readiness at the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center in the Gobi Desert and can fast-track a launch should the need arise.
China activated this contingency plan in the wake of the Shenzhou 20 debris strike, getting the uncrewed rescue mission off the ground just 20 days later.
Shenzhou 22 provides "a successful example for the international aerospace field in efficiently responding to emergencies," the China Manned Space Agency (CMSA) said in a statement today.
"The success of this mission fully demonstrates the advantages of the new national system, profoundly interprets the concept of 'life first, safety first' in China's manned spaceflight, comprehensively verifies the scientific reliability of the 'one-for-one, rolling backup' strategy for China's space station mission, and practically tests the rapid response and emergency handling capabilities of the entire project," CMSA officials added.
The damaged Shenzhou 20 capsule, meanwhile, is still docked to Tiangong. It "will remain in orbit to conduct relevant experiments," according to the CMSA statement. That space stay will have to end in the next five months or so, however; Shenzhou 20 occupies a docking port that will be needed by the next crewed flight to Tiangong, Shenzhou 23, which is expected to launch in April 2026.
LATEST POSTS
- 1
Inside the cockpit of RAF tanker during defensive mission against Iranian drones - 2
Plane Passenger Allegedly Includes ‘Bomb Threat’ in Hotspot Network Name, Forces Flight to Make Emergency Landing - 3
Tens of thousands protest as far-right AfD forms new youth group - 4
Key Caper d: A Survey of \Procedure and Tomfoolery Released\ Tabletop game - 5
Blue Origin’s New Glenn rocket landed its booster on a barge at sea – an achievement that will broaden the commercial spaceflight market
Revealing the Specialty of Food Matching: Improving Culinary Encounters
Savvy Watches: Which One Is Appropriate for You?
More parents refusing vitamin K shots for newborns, study finds
Do you lean your seat back on the plane? These travel pros — and real-life couple — won't do it.
NASA unveils close-up pictures of the comet popping by from another star
Manual for Wonderful Getaway destination
New findings suggest atmosphere could exist on exoplanet TOI-561b
Astronauts beam home Christmas wishes from International Space Station: 'I think we may be orbiting a little higher than Santa' (video)
Am I a Summer, or is this a scam? What I learned from color analysis.













