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China launched the Shenzhou-23 spacecraft on May 24, 2026, sending three astronauts to its Tiangong space station in a mission that will for the first time see a Chinese crew member remain in orbit for about a year.
The Long March-2F rocket lifted off from Jiuquan at 1508 GMT carrying commander Zhu Yangzhu, pilot Zhang Zhiyuan and payload specialist Lai Ka-ying (also reported as Li Jiaying), the first astronaut from Hong Kong.
Chinaâs space agency said one of the trio will extend their stay to study long-duration human physiology â including radiation exposure, bone and muscle loss and psychological stresses â and carry out scientific and materials experiments.
The flight will perform an autonomous rapid rendezvous and docking with Tiangong and follows recent emergency and lifeboat flights after suspected debris damage to a previous Shenzhou vehicle.
Shenzhou-23 is being framed as a stepping stone for Beijingâs ambition to mount a crewed moon landing by 2030 and to develop new lunar hardware such as the Mengzhou capsule, Lanyue lander and heavy-lift Long March-10 rocket.
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