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Rocket Black Box Found In Inner Mongolia

China's Shenzhou VI manned mission into space carrying two astronauts, the country's second manned space flight, lifts off from the launch pad at the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center in Jiuquan, in China's Gansu province, 12 October 2005. China's second manned space flight has been 'a complete success', Premier Wen Jiabao said 12 October as he stressed the country's space program was for peaceful purposes only. AFP Photo/Xinhua.

Otog, Inner Mongolia (XNA) Oct 13, 2005
The magnetic recorder, or "black box", that disengaged from the Long March II F rocket carrying the Shenzhou-6 spacecraft into orbit, has been found here 45 minutes after the blast-off Wednesday morning.

The recorder, crucial to retrieve data that telemetry fails to obtain, will be sent to Beijing for data analysis.

The recorder was first sighted by Lian Hua, an herdswoman in Otog Qi in Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, which fell on the pasture just 1.5 kilometers away from her home. Xinhua reporters with the recovery team saw at the site that the "black box' was marked with words reading "Government Issue," "Hand over to the Government," and "Monetary Reward Guaranteed."

Nearly 10 minutes after the launch of Shenzhou-6 spacecraft at 9:00 a.m., the Long March II F rocket carried the capsule into a preset orbit and ended its mission in the flight.

The escape tower, boosters and fairing of the rocket dropped to four sites in a strip ranging about 800 km that covers Badain Jaran Desert of Inner Mongolia in north China and Yulin of the Shaanxi Province in northwest China.

Zhu Yabin, head of a land emergency rescue team, said that the magnetic recorder has been designed to fall to Otog Qi in Inner Mongolia with the rocket body when the rocket performed stage one and stage two separation.

Wreckage of the rockets will be exploded on site or sent back to Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center to destroy. By press time, three of the four roll boosters have been found, the remaining oneis still being searched for.

Source: Xinhua News Agency

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China's Taikonauts Fulfil Tsien's Vision
Washington (UPI) Oct 13, 2005
China's achievement in sending taikonauts Cols. Fei Junlong and Nie Haisheng into orbit on the manned Shenzhou-6 space craft for a four or five day mission is the second step in a long campaign of amazing vision mapped out by the genius founder of its space program half a century ago.







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