The Shenzhou XX crew has now been aboard China's space station for more than five months, performing space science experiments, in-orbit maintenance, and emergency drills. Their work marks another chapter in the rapid evolution of China's human spaceflight program, which completed the construction of the Tiangong space station in record time.
Tiangong now functions as a national-level orbital laboratory. By the end of 2024, more than 180 scientific projects had been conducted aboard, generating over 300 terabytes of data. Research has included experiments in human biology, microgravity physics, and space materials. Breakthroughs include the cultivation of new rice germplasm in microgravity and the differentiation of human embryonic stem cells into blood progenitor cells in orbit.
In February 2025, China and Pakistan signed an agreement for astronaut selection and training, marking the first step toward participation by international astronauts aboard the Chinese space station. The initiative demonstrates China's openness to global cooperation in crewed space missions.
Following recovery in Inner Mongolia, scientists began analyzing the samples, uncovering new insights into magmatic activity, the lunar mantle's water content, and the evolution of the Moon's internal magnetic field. The Chang'e 6 team was later honored with the International Astronautical Federation's World Space Award.
The mission also carried four international payloads: instruments from France, the European Space Agency, and Italy on the lander, and a small Pakistani satellite aboard the orbiter-furthering China's record of international collaboration in lunar science.
Tianwen 1 also served as a platform for international cooperation, sharing orbital data with NASA and ESA to improve collision avoidance and conducting joint solar wind studies with ESA's Mars Express. The mission earned the World Space Award in 2022.
On May 29, 2025, China launched the Tianwen 2 probe-the nation's first asteroid sampling and return mission. The spacecraft will visit the near-Earth asteroid 2016 HO3 to collect samples before heading to the main-belt comet 311P, in a mission expected to last about a decade. The results are expected to deepen scientific understanding of the solar system's formation and the properties of small celestial bodies.
Looking ahead to the 15th Five-Year Plan period (2026-2030), China plans to launch the Chang'e 7 and Chang'e 8 lunar missions and the Tianwen 3 Mars sample return mission around 2028, further expanding its presence in human and robotic space exploration.
Related Links
China National Space Administration
The Chinese Space Program - News, Policy and Technology
China News from SinoDaily.com
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