![]() Mengzhou spacecraft mockup displayed in 2023 | |
Manufacturer | ![]() |
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Country of origin | ![]() |
Operator | CMSA |
Applications | Tiangong space station crew and cargo transport Crewed exploration beyond LEO |
Specifications | |
Spacecraft type | Crewed |
Launch mass | |
Dry mass | Crew module: 5,600 kg (12,300 lb) (landing mass)[6] |
Payload capacity |
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Crew capacity |
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Volume | Crew module: 13 m3 (459 cu ft)[2] |
Power | Solar |
Regime | Low Earth orbit, lunar Transfer Orbit, lunar orbit |
Design life | 21 days[1] |
Dimensions | |
Length | |
Diameter | Crew module: 4.5 metres (15 ft)[6] |
Production | |
Status | Testing |
Built | 1 |
Launched | 1 |
Maiden launch | LM5B-Y1 (5 May 2020) |
The Mengzhou (Chinese: 梦舟; pinyin: mèng zhōu), formerly known as the Next-Generation Crewed Spacecraft (Chinese: 新一代载人飞船; pinyin: xīnyīdài zàirén fēichuán), is a type of reusable spacecraft developed and manufactured by China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation (CASC). The spacecraft prototype underwent its first uncrewed test flight on 5 May 2020.
The crew carrier is designed to conduct lunar exploration in conjunction with China's future lunar descent spacecraft, the Lanyue lander, by the end of the 2020s. A low-earth orbit (LEO) version of the spacecraft intended to ferry astronauts to the Tiangong Space Station is also under development; this LEO version will serve as a modern replacement for the existing Shenzhou spacecraft.[8] The new spacecraft is expected to attain crewed flight capability around 2027-2028.[9]
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