Science Friday - What’s Next For China’s Space Program?

Episode Date: June 12, 2025

This week, China’s Tianwen-2 spacecraft sent back its first image from space. It’s headed to a rendezvous with the asteroid Kamoʻoalewa, one of Earth’s “quasi-moons,” where it will collect ...samples in 2026. The mission comes after several successful lunar missions, including a lunar rover and a sample return mission from the far side of the moon. Host Ira Flatow talks with reporter Ling Xin from the South China Morning Post about the goals of China’s space program, and what might be ahead.Plus, astronomer Dean Regas describes his new “tactile astronomy” book, which seeks to bring stories of the constellations to young blind and low-vision readers. Guests:Ling Xin is a science reporter at the South China Morning Post based in Ohio.Dean Regas is an astronomer, host of the “Looking Up” podcast, and author of the new book All About Orion.Transcript is available on sciencefriday.com. Subscribe to this podcast. Plus, to stay updated on all things science, sign up for Science Friday's newsletters.

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hi, I'm Ira Flato. You're listening to Science Friday. Did you know that China has a very active space program, including a space station and rovers on the moon? NASA's Artemis program, it says we will go back to the moon this time to stay. So China has something similar in its mind. Over the past few years, I have become really interested in the Chinese space program. They've launched complicated robotic moon missions. They've brought back samples of rock from the far side of the moon. And I've thought, you know, if this was NASA doing this, we'd all be talking about it every other week.
Starting point is 00:00:48 And now with big budget cuts proposed at NASA, is China going to become the global leader in space? Joining me now is Ling Shin, science reporter at the South China Morning Post. She's based in Ohio. Welcome to Science Friday. Thank you, Ira, for having me. China has some really interesting space missions. Let's talk about it. Just this week, they released a picture from a spacecraft headed to an asteroid. Yes. So that mission is the second in a series of a deep space mission, which means beyond the moon. The first one was a Tian Wen one Mars mission, which was very successful. China made it to the Mars surface in its first attempt to land on the red planet. And now this is the second one. Tian Wint, 2, actually, it's a very time-consuming mission.
Starting point is 00:01:43 The entire thing is going to take 10 years. It has two major goals. First of all, it's going to bring back samples from an asteroid. That's going to take about three years. And after that, the main spacecraft will use the Earth's gravity for a slingshot and begin a seven-year journey to commit three. 311P, an object in the solar system's asteroid belt, known for shedding dust in multiple tails. Wow, that is some mission. I know the Chang lunar missions have also been impressive with landers and rovers, and there's that sample return mission.
Starting point is 00:02:25 Does China have a roadmap here, you know, an overall idea of where it's headed? Yes. China's lunar exploration. program started in the 1990s. It was actually first proposed by a geologist. So it was proposed as a series of science missions sending robotic uncrewed spacecraft to do scientific exploration of the moon. So it was designed in a very step-by-step way. First of all, you do an orbit of moon and then you try to land on the moon and then you try to bring samples back. And China planned it well enough to have a backup mission for each of this stage. For instance, Chang'a 2 was a backup of Chang'o 1, you know, in case Chang'1 fails. But if Chang'O 1 succeeds, Changa 2 will be assigned to do
Starting point is 00:03:30 something else. So China has completed all these six missions so far with zero failure. Do they eventually want to land on the moon with humans, send people there? Yes, yes. Actually, they are working towards this. I believe they are already making the flight models of everything from the lander to the astronaut suits. And the Chinese government, has said multiple times that they're on track to land Chinese astronauts on the moon's surface by 2030, if not earlier. And then eventually Mars, perhaps? The government hasn't said anything specifically about a crude mission to the Mars,
Starting point is 00:04:18 but China is working on bringing back rock samples from Mars. Yeah, well, we've just, NASA just said they're not, they've just canceled their return mission of these Mars samples. So maybe China will get there first. It's really a shame because you've done such a good job collecting all the samples. And China's approach will be very different from NASA's approach. China will just select one landing site and just touch down and maybe deploy a lender and then a rover and just sample in that area and then kind of grab and go. Grab and go.
Starting point is 00:05:00 It sounds like the different varieties of samples collected by NASA over all these years. Yeah, I know NASA samples will stay there. We talk a lot about the International Space Station, but as I said before, China has its own space station, and there is another one plan for near the moon, right? Yes, there's not much official information about it, but it's very similar to NASA's a lunar gateway. So the space station will be orbiting the moon as a bridge between Earth, moon, and deeper space. And the long-term goal of this is that it would be international, like countries, other countries joining in? The Luna Space Station thing is a little bit far.
Starting point is 00:05:51 Right now they are working on the research base, probably in the South Pole. region of the moon, very similar to what the U.S. has planned. And this is actually also an international effort. A lot of people compare that to the Artemis Accords, but this one is led by China and Russia. Russia will be providing the nuclear power for the station. Between 10 and 20 countries and organizations have already signed on to the China-led moon-based. program already. How is China's space program organized? I mean, is there an equivalent of NASA, one main organizing body?
Starting point is 00:06:40 No, no. NASA is kind of the ones that handles everything related to civilian space, but China does not have an equivalent of NASA. China's space program is top-down government-led, but there is a split between an uncrewed and the crude mission. Okay, the uncrewed civilian missions are managed by an organization called China National Space Administration, CNSA, which does all these lunar robotic missions and satellites and international collaboration. However, all the manned thing, for instance, the Tangom Space Station, is run by the military.
Starting point is 00:07:24 So it is, this agency is called China Manned Space Station. agency, and it reports to China's top military body. What thing that I have never understood, I mean, I watched it happen, is that the U.S. is barred by law from collaboration with the Chinese space program, isn't it? Yes. So a lot of people know the Wolf Amendment, which was proposed by a Republican representative from Virginia. Wolf in 2011 that bars NASA from working directly, bilaterally, with China on space projects, unless Congress gives special approval.
Starting point is 00:08:07 But there is something else that is less known, which is called ITAR. ITAR is a U.S. export control law that restricts sharing of any technology with potential military use, including a lot of space components. You know, some of the things that China is doing, the U.S. has already done. Are there missions that are really just Chinese firsts? Yes, I would say, for instance, when China was doing the two lunar far-side missions, they did some kind of first by putting in relay satellites in the Earth-Moon space. So these satellites need to see, quote and quote, okay, see the Earth and also the far side of the moon at the same time. And such satellites, they just relay data between the Earth and the far side of the moon.
Starting point is 00:09:10 And they are seen as a critical space infrastructure. So this second one that China put in for the Chang'a very complicated, the Changa Sixth Mission and also the forthcoming lunar base project, it is very powerful. It can actually support 10 spacecraft on the lunar far side at the same time. Wow. Well, of course, they're also the first to have that sample return from the far side of the moon, too. Yes, scientifically, that's really, really unique. Because we know Apollo samples come to how many is 380-something kibaba.
Starting point is 00:09:51 But all of those are from the near side. Yeah, it would be like going to the U.S. desert and thinking you've got a good sample of what the Earth looks like in one spot. And of course, the Chinese are operating a telescope. They were the first to put us telescope on the surface of the moon for what, a decade? Yes, that actually got onto the moon. It was the Chang'a 3 mission. It's a very small telescope with a 15 millimeter aperture. but it is the first one, and it has actually worked for more than 10 years.
Starting point is 00:10:28 Do you have a sense of how much China budgets for its space operations? We know very little about that. NASA needs to be transparent with its budget, but a large part of China space mission has to do with the military. So the scientists who first initiated the Chang'o Luna program once mentioned, that the Chang'o-1 mission actually only cost 200 million yuan, which was the cost to dig one kilometer of metro tunnel in Beijing. So he meant to say that it's really not that expensive. But that is the only reliable number about the budget we know so far. Yeah, it must be challenging for you as a reporter to learn about this when so much of the work is kept secret. It must be for
Starting point is 00:11:21 frustrating. Yeah, this withhold of information is really, really challenging, including the Tian 1-1-2 spacecraft you just mentioned. Until this moment, we still don't know how the spacecraft looks like, like what the size and how heavy it is, because somehow they decided to publish mission profile only after a mission is successful. Let's finish up by talking. Let's finish up by talking about some of the missions that we should keep an eye on. Tell us about some of them, please. Okay. So NASA's Artemis program, it says we will go back to the moon this time to stay. So China has something similar in its mind. It eyes to build a base and all the infrastructure to live and work from the moon. So what we can look at is next year, they are going to launch the Chang
Starting point is 00:12:21 Seven mission, and that mission will include a hopper, which will jump to the bottom of craters in the South Pole region, to look for water ice, which can be used for life support and making rocket fuels and stuff. And then in 2028, they are going to launch the Chang'a 8 mission and will attempt something no one else has done before, which is to build the first brick on the moon. It will test whether local lunar soil can be turned into construction material and whether those bricks can be assembled into real structures. Wow. I'm visioning down the road a 3D printer on the moon. Yeah. Printing out these bases. That's definitely one way to go. Yeah. There is actually a community of
Starting point is 00:13:14 hundreds of Chinese scientists working on these things, which will eventually lead to to the Chinese moon base. Well, I want to thank you for taking time to be with us today. It has been a fascinating discussion about a lot of Chinese spaced up. Very few of us, I think, are very aware of. Thank you, Ling Shen, science reporter at the South China Morning Post based in Ohio. Thank you for taking time to be with us today. Thank you very much.
Starting point is 00:13:46 After the break, seeing the night sky in a new way with your fingers. You can not only see the outlines of the constellation, but you can feel the stars and feel the constellations with these upraised tactile parts. Stick around. Hey, Flora here. We're wrapping up Science Friday's fiscal year on June 30th, and we could use your support. I know I don't need to tell you it is a tenuous time for science and for public media, and we are relying on donations from our listeners more than ever.
Starting point is 00:14:25 We're aiming to raise $40,000 to close out our budget. and with your help, I know we can do it. So if Science Friday is valuable to you, if you rely on our reporting to make sense of the world or just give you a little joy, please consider going to ScienceFriday.com slash donate to make a donation. It's fast, easy, secure,
Starting point is 00:14:46 and any amount you can swing will help sustain us in this critical moment. Thank you. We have said it before and we really mean it. Science Friday can only continue with your support. That's science friday.com slash donate. Thank you. you. Another way to look at space is with your fingers, with a tactile astronomy book for the
Starting point is 00:15:10 visually impaired. Astronomer Dean Regis joins us. He's the author of All About Orion. Welcome back, Dean. Oh, glad to be here. Nice to have you from the title, I'm guessing. This is a book about constellations. Yeah, so the book All About Orion, well, we're going to be talking about the mythology behind this famous constellation, how to find it. in the sky. Some of his friends is other constellations like Taurus and Scorpius. And then some deep space objects. But the twist on this is that it's actually tactile. So you can not only see the outlines of the constellations, but you can feel the stars and feel the constellations with these upraised tactile parts. Is it aimed at any age group? Well, as most of my books go there, they're supposed to be
Starting point is 00:16:00 for kids, but they're always sneaky for adults, too. So I always throw in a lot of stuff for all ages, but mostly for, you know, elementary, middle, even high school, but I think adults are going to have a lot of fun with it, too. All right. Tell us about the mechanics of a tactile book. How does that work? Well, so I partnered with a local publisher here in Cincinnati called Clovernook, and they're the Clovernook Center for the Blind and Visually Impaired. They do mostly reprints of books in Braille. And they came up with this idea that they wanted to make a new book themselves specifically for that audience. And I had this idea of doing a, you know, Touch the Constellations book and it just came together. And so we've got a couple versions.
Starting point is 00:16:44 One of them is a large print with tactile constellations where you can feel the outlines of them. And you can feel the outlines of things like the Orion Nebula and the Horsehead Nebula. And then there's another version where it's complete braille over top of text. So it's really for people that are cited and with visual impairments that they can read together. So constellations aren't just the shapes. You have stars of different brightness or different color, right? I mean, is that information you can convey through touch? We can with the star brightnesses.
Starting point is 00:17:20 There's a key that goes with it. So the bigger the circles that you can feel, the brighter the stars are out there. And of course, one of the big hits is talking about the star Beetlejuice, which is one of the super massive stars in our galaxy. And there's even a scale representation of Beetlejuice versus the sun that you can see and touch. Well, I can't let you go without you giving us some idea of some sky highlights coming up this summer. What might we be looking out for? Well, I am sorry to say, Orion is not one of those things. in the summer sky Orion kind of hides behind the sun.
Starting point is 00:17:56 So we won't see him up there, but we will see the constellation that in mythology killed Orion, Scorpius, the Scorpion is the big one that starts coming up in the southern sky after dark and has a wealth of really great night sky objects. If you look towards the south, you see Scorpius, you see Sagittarius.
Starting point is 00:18:16 And that is where the heart of the Milky Way is. That is what the summer season is for. you can see lots of star clusters, lots of nebolas, and lots of stars over there. How about planets? Well, we got a planet drought in the evening sky. All the big planets are out of the way. Mars is still hanging around faintly shining in the evening sky. But Venus is the big one in the morning.
Starting point is 00:18:39 Also with Saturn there too. So for your early risers, you're greeted to the day with Venus. Well, we'll have to just do with that until we can have you back on and talk more about the next sky showing. you, Dean, and good luck with the book. Absolutely. Keep looking up. Estratomar Dean Regis, author of All About Orion and host of the Looking Up podcast. That's about all the time we have. For now, a lot of people help make this show happen. Sandy Roberts. Jordan Smudgic. Emma Gomez. Valissa Mayors. I'm Ira Flato. Thanks for listening.

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