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IRON :CHROMIUM without leaks – Fatherland's Answer to the CHROME's Privacy concerns..

IRON :CHROMIUM without leaks – Fatherland's Answer to the CHROME's Privacy concerns..

well, Sorry guys it has almost become a fetish for me to follow and write about Chrome and If you had followed my blog or any technology post for that matter , a hailstorm is averted coz’ of Google License and rights use.

And as you probably know by now, The Bundesrepublik Deutschland was really worried about the Data Collection policies of Chrome and went as far as issuing an advisory as to not use Chrome for critical usage.

So its natural to see a German GmBH taking the initiative to weed out the concerns.

Enter Iron: 
Developed by German software company SRWare is Chrome stripped of all the user ID information that gave the German government cause for concernAccording to them, Iron is essentially the Chromium source code, with the following modifications



  • No unique user-ID
  • No user-specific information is sent to Google
  • No alternative error messages
  • Crash information is not sent to Google
  • No Google updater
The above is as of the concerned website(s) I did not had a chance to verify the claims as I am a little busy with 2 deadlines for the Month. BUt, I’ve taken the time to download Iron and Install. And it seems nearly identical to Chrome with no superficial changes except for the Bootloader Screen. (splash)

Do drop me a line if you find Iron useful/resourcehog or simply if you’ve downloaded it, I’d love to hear.


College Students Develop "Rocket Motors" In Tamil Nadu

College Students Develop "Rocket Motors" In Tamil Nadu

Applause 

Well, Its not really a rocket motor , but a motor used onboard rockets, 

And its by a team composing of faculty and students of VIT and AU. 

Appreciation and Critical Point
Yes its an achievement for the stdent folk and needs to be appreciated, but I’ll certainly say the staff of the universites shouldn’t get sloppy after 2-3 innovations to account for the DRDO/ISRO Collobration funds in addition to CSIR funds,  we need more and more turnkey solutions coming out of our universities to mainstearm Indian economy.
The News Piece:

Students of an engineering college here have developed for the first time in the country, two special brushless motors, which will form an important part in the soon to be launched GSLV rocket. These motors were previously being imported by Indian Space Research Organisation.

A prototype of this motor was displayed by the students of Sona College of Technology to ISRO scientists at the Vikram Sarabhai Space Centre (VVSC) and ISRO’s inertial systems unit (IISU) at Thiruvanthapuram.

The first motor, which will be placed in the rocket nozzle for controlling its direction, is a 32 newton metre, 1000 rotations per minute quadruplex brushless DC torque motor, Director of Sona Special Power Electronics and Electric Drives (SSPEED) said.

The second, for controlling the rotation of the panels in a satellite, is a 2 newton metre, 50 rotations per minute slotless brushless DC motor. It will be used in the scan mechanism of microwave analysis detection of rain and atmospheric structures for the Megha Tropiques Spacecraft.

ISRO’s inertial systems unit needed ‘cog free’ motors to enhance the performance of precision scanning mechanisms in spacecraft and SSPEED had met all the required parameters, he said.

Prof Kannan said this was a “unique” achievement by an institution, which designed and developed an aerospace quality component for actual use in ISRO’s satellites and rockets. “This would save precious foreign exchange and provide valuable technical know how,” he said.

Source: Press Trust of India



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Eric Schmidt admits to 'defensive component' of browser launch

Eric Schmidt admits to 'defensive component' of browser launch

Google’s chief executive admitted Thursday there was a “defensive component” to the Web search giant’s launch of its own Internet browser, thereby pitting it against Microsoft’s dominant software.
Speaking to the Financial Times from the Republican National Convention in St. Paul, Eric Schmidt said: “Microsoft has a history of favouring its own applications and I can give you 500,000 pages of court testimony, document web blogs and so forth and so on about that.”
Schmidt added that “there is a defensive component” to the launch of Google Chrome, the code of which will be open source so no rights will have to be paid by anyone using or adapting the software, which will be a competitor to Microsoft’s Internet Explorer, the dominant Internet browser.
“It is true that we actually, and I in particular, have said for a long time that we should not do a browser because it wasn’t necessary,” he told the business daily.
“The thing that changed in the past couple of years … is that people started building powerful applications on top of browsers and the browsers that were out there, in particular in Explorer, were not up to the task of running complex applications.”
Schmidt continued: “There is an opportunity for a platform and that platform for running these new applications is something that you can’t really do on IE7 (Internet Explorer version 7), and that’s the argument.”
Chrome is Google’s latest weapon in its bid to become the leader in all Internet areas. The last major browser war was won by Microsoft when it won the battle for dominance in the 1990s against Netscape Navigator.
The move comes amid growth in browser market share by Firefox, a project of the nonprofit Mozilla Foundation, which ironically get a large portion of its funding from Google.
According to estimates by the research firm Net Applications, Internet Explorer is used by 74 percent of computer users worldwide compared with 18 percent for Firefox.
Glonass Avaliable for India

Glonass Avaliable for India

Russia’s global space navigation system Glonass is available for India to use, Russia’s defense minister said Monday. Sergei Ivanov, who is also a deputy prime minister, said Moscow and New Delhi had agreed to launch Glonass M satellites with the help of Indian carrier rockets, and to create new-generation navigation satellites.
“Two agreements are to be signed to develop cooperation on the program during the Russian president’s forthcoming visit [January 25-26],” Ivanov said.
Earlier, the head of Russia’s Federal Space Agency, Anatoly Perminov, said Russia and India plan to jointly use Glonass.
Glonass, a Russian version of the U.S. Global Positioning System (GPS), is designed for both military and civilian purposes, and allows users to identify their positions in real time. It can also be used in geological prospecting.
President Vladimir Putin ordered in December 2005 that the system be ready by 2008 and in March this year Ivanov said Glonass will be available to domestic consumers for military as well for civilian purposes by the end of 2007.
Perminov said earlier Russia is in talks with the United States and the European Space Agency to prepare agreements on the use of Glonass jointly with GPS and Galileo satellite navigation systems.
The agency plans to have 18 satellites in orbit by late 2007 or early 2008, and a full orbital group of 24 satellites by the end of 2009, he said.
In November Russian Defense Minister Sergei Ivanov said Russia will lift all precision restrictions, from the start of 2007, in the use of Glonass to enable accurate and unlimited commercial use of the military-controlled global positioning system. Current restrictions limit the accuracy for civilian users of Glonass to 30 meters.
The first launch under the Glonass program took place October 12, 1982, but the system was only formally launched September 24, 1993.
Andrei Kozlov, the head of the Reshetnev Research and Production Center in the Siberian city of Krasnoyarsk, Russia’s leading spacecraft manufacturer, said earlier the Glonass system has 13 satellites in orbit.
The satellites currently in use are of two modifications – Glonass and its updated version Glonass-M. Glonass-M has a longer service life of seven years and is equipped with updated antenna feeder systems and an additional navigation frequency for civilian users.
A future modification, Glonass-K, is an entirely new model based on a non-pressurized platform, standardized to the specifications of the previous models’ platform, Express-1000.
Glonass-Ks’ estimated service life has been increased to 10-12 years and a third “civilian” L-range frequency was added.
Tests on Glonass-K satellites are scheduled for 2007

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Russia And China Could Sign Moon Exploration Pact In 2006

Russia And China Could Sign Moon Exploration Pact In 2006

Russia And China Could Sign Moon Exploration Pact In 2006

One big happy moon family.

Russia and China may conclude a Moon exploration agreement by the end of the year, the head of the Russian Space Agency said. China has already successfully launched into orbit two manned space vehicles. Its first manned flight three years ago made it the third country to launch a human being into space on its own, after Russia and the U.S.
“I can say that as a result of the Russian-Chinese space sub-commission’s work, our priority is a joint program on Moon exploration,” Anatoly Perminov said. “A number of contracts have been signed involving both Russian and Chinese enterprises.”
“We are currently working on the Moon as partners, and we have concluded that Russia and China have moved beyond their previous relationship, when China was a buyer and we [Russia] were a seller,” Perminov said.
He also said he received an invitation to visit leading air and space enterprises in Shanghai.
“China is now a leading space power – right now, only three countries explore space intensively, namely Russia, the United States and China,” he said.
Perminov said the Russian-Chinese Space Exploration Commission will hold a concluding session in Beijing by the end of 2006, and that the Russian delegation will be led by Prime Minister Mikhail Fradkov.
“The work of our sub-commission should create a favorable context for the visit of our [Russian] prime minister to China,” he said. “We have already adopted a cooperation program with China for 2007-2009.”
Perminov also said China may sign a contract to participate in a Russian project to bring soil back from one of Mars’ moons – Phobos.
“One of the directions we are working in is a flight to Phobos, with Chinese participation, which will bring back some of its soil to Earth,” Perminov said. “We plan to reach the final stage [of our talks] by the end of 2006, possibly even by the start of the sub-commission’s work under Prime Minister Mikhail Fradkov

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Cracking The Secret Codes Of The European Galileo Satellite Network

Cracking The Secret Codes Of The European Galileo Satellite Network

Mark Psiaki, left, professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering, hooks up an experimental GPS/Galileo digital storage receiver and patch antenna with the assistance of graduate students Todd Humphreys, center, and Shan Mohiuddin in Rhodes Hall. by Staff WritersIthaca NY (SPX) Jul 19, 2006Members of Cornell’s Global Positioning System Laboratory have cracked the so-called pseudo random number codes of Europe’s first global navigation satellite, despite efforts to keep the codes secret. That means free access for consumers who use navigation devices – including handheld receivers and systems installed in vehicles – that need PRNs to listen to satellites.The codes and the methods used to extract them were published in the June issue of GPS World.
The navigational satellite, called the GIOVE-A, for Galileo In-Orbit Validation Element-A, is a prototype for 30 satellites that by 2010 will constitute Galileo, a $4-billion joint venture of the European Union, European Space Agency and private investors. Galileo is Europe’s answer to the U.S. GPS system.
Because GPS satellites, which were put into orbit by the Department of Defense, are funded by U.S. taxpayers, the signal is free — consumers need only purchase a receiver. Galileo, on the other hand, must make money to reimburse its investors — presumably by charging a fee for PRN codes.
Because Galileo and GPS will share frequency bandwidths, Europe and the United States signed an agreement whereby some of Galileo’s PRN codes must be “open source.” Nevertheless, after broadcasting its first signals on Jan. 12, 2006, none of GIOVE-A’s codes had been made public.
In late January, Mark Psiaki, an aerospace engineer at Cornell and co-leader of the GPS Laboratory, requested the codes from Martin Unwin at Surrey Satellite Technology Ltd., one of three privileged groups in the world with the PRN codes.
“In a very polite way, he said, ‘Sorry, goodbye,'” recalled Psiaki. Next, Psiaki contacted Oliver Montenbruck, a friend and colleague in Germany, and discovered that he also wanted the codes. “Even Europeans were being frustrated,” said Psiaki. “Then it dawned on me: Maybe we can pull these things off the air, just with an antenna and lots of signal processing.”
Within one week Psiaki’s team developed a basic algorithm to extract the codes. Two weeks later they had their first signal from the satellite, but were thrown off track because the signal’s repeat period was twice that expected. By mid-March they derived their first estimates of the code, and — with clever detective work and an important tip from Montenbruck — published final versions on their Web site on April 1. Two days later, NovAtel Inc., a Canadian-based major manufacturer of GPS receivers, downloaded the codes from the Web site in a few minutes and soon afterward began tracking GIOVE-A for the first time.
Galileo eventually published PRN codes in mid-April, but they weren’t the codes currently used by the GIOVE-A satellite. Furthermore, the same publication labeled the open source codes as intellectual property, claiming a license is required for any commercial receiver. “That caught my eye right away,” said Psiaki. “Apparently they were trying to make money on the open source code.”
Afraid that cracking the code might have been copyright infringement, Psiaki’s group sought outside help. “We were told that cracking the encryption of creative content, like music or a movie, is illegal, but the encryption used by a navigation signal is fair game,” said Psiaki. The upshot: The Europeans cannot copyright basic data about the physical world, even if the data are coming from a satellite that they built.
“Imagine someone builds a lighthouse,” argued Psiaki. “And I’ve gone by and see how often the light flashes and measured where the coordinates are. Can the owner charge me a licensing fee for looking at the light? … No. How is looking at the Galileo satellite any different?”
Other authors of the GPS World article are Cornell colleagues Paul Kintner, Todd Humphreys, Shan Mohiuddin, Alessandro Cerruti and Steven Powell

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New Horizons Crosses The Asteroid Belt

New Horizons Crosses The Asteroid Belt

New Horizons Crosses The Asteroid Belt

New Horizons has entered the main asteroid belt and will be traversing this part of our solar system through August. May, like April, was a busy month for New Horizons’ instrument payload commissioning. In particular, our instruments LORRI, PEPSSI, Alice and Ralph all continued their in in-flight checkouts.In addition, the spacecraft itself received a new suite of onboard fault-protection autonomy software, resolving a number of needed bug fixes discovered in ground and flight testing.
We continue to see software-induced guidance computer resets once or twice per month on average, but the spacecraft recovers flawlessly from these, without any interruption to plans. New software for this computer is in the works and will resolve the bug that causes this; we expect to have it tested and aboard the spacecraft around Oct. 1.
Highlights of our payload-commissioning activities included door openings for PEPSSI (May 3), Alice (May 20) and Ralph (May 29). The Student Dust Counter registered each of these events at the precise time of the door openings by the noise they made on the spacecraft.
Each of these instruments also saw first light, i.e., detecting signals from stars (Ralph) or the interplanetary medium (PEPSSI and Alice). From these tests we appear to have a little higher-than-spec sensitivity with Ralph’s color and panchromatic cameras.
We also found that Alice’s background counts are only about half of what we predicted, indicating the RTG induces a significantly lower background than we estimated before launch. This lower background rate will substantially enhance Alice’s signal-to-noise ratio on faint spectral features.
From the Alice, Ralph, and PEPSSI testing this month, we can continue to say, from all of the data surrounding the careful, step-by-step instrument-commissioning activities to date, that our instrument payload continues to look like it’s performing as well or better than predicted from ground testing. This is a testament to the exacting engineering that went into their development.
In other news for May, we began to finalize the suite of Jupiter observations planned for next year during our Jupiter flyby, and we continued to track New Horizons to determine whether a fine course correction will be needed this fall. So far, none appears necessary, but the final verdict won’t be in until we have about another 90 to 100 days of tracking.
Planning activities began in May for the 60 day checkouts we’ll perform each year during Cruise 2, also known as Glen’s Glide: the coast from Jupiter to Pluto.
From 2008 to 2011, these checkouts will occur in the fall of each year, but in 2012, 2013 and 2014 the checkouts will occur in the summer. The summertime checkouts will occur in 2012 and 2014 because we’ll be rehearsing the Pluto encounter aboard the spacecraft during these checkouts, and we want the Earth-Sun geometry at rehearsal time to reproduce faithfully what will occur at the encounter, in the summer of 2015. The 2013 checkout provides a backup opportunity for an additional rehearsal if one becomes necessary.
I’ll now turn to the “water cooler news story” of the month for New Horizons: In early May, we got word from Lockheed-Martin that tourists in the Bahamas found several large pieces of our Atlas V 551 launch vehicle’s nose fairing that had washed up on shore.
Now, turn to the significance of our current location: deep in the solar system’s main asteroid belt. This region comprises a handful of dwarf planets, such as Ceres – itself 1,000 kilometers (620 miles) in diameter – and literally millions of debris bits created by collisions between asteroids.
These small bodies range in size from mountains to objects as large as 100 kilometers (62 miles) across. The asteroid belt also contains innumerable boulders, rocks and dust motes created by the same collisions.
The first spacecraft to transit the asteroid belt was NASA’s Pioneer 10, which made its epic crossing in 1972 on the way to the historic first encounter of a spacecraft with Jupiter.
Later, Pioneer 11, Voyagers 1 and 2, Galileo, Cassini, NEAR and Ulysses have all made the same kind of journey across the main belt. Now it is our turn.
Fortunately, the asteroid belt is so huge that, despite its large population of small bodies, the chance of running into one is almost vanishingly small – far less than one in a billion. That means if you want to come close enough to an asteroid to make detailed studies of it, you have to aim for one.
The first such asteroid flyby was made by Galileo in October 1991, and Galileo made a second asteroid encounter in 1994.
Other spacecraft, most notably the NEAR (Near Earth Asteroid Rendezvous) mission, also have made close main-belt-asteroid flybys, yielding important geological and geophysical insights into these bodies.
Galileo made the first discovery of an asteroid satellite in its 1991 flyby of Gaspra. Since then, ground-based observers have found dozens of asteroid satellites.
In addition to main belt asteroid flybys, NASA’s NEAR and the Japanese Hayabusa mission both have made orbital rendezvous and landings on asteroids closer to Earth.
Next year, NASA plans to launch the Dawn Discovery mission to orbit two of the largest asteroids: Vesta and Ceres. Dawn will arrive in orbit about Vesta in 2012, and will reach Ceres, the largest asteroid, in August 2015, just a month or so after New Horizons encounters Pluto.
A long time ago, we considered the possibility of targeting a close asteroid flyby with New Horizons during our main belt traverse. As the mission’s principal investigator, I rejected this early on for two reasons.
First, such an encounter would take about half of our Kuiper Belt fuel to accomplish. Second, even for this amount of fuel, the only asteroids we could hope to reach would be tiny – just a few kilometers across.
Though such an encounter certainly would be scientifically useful, it couldn’t be justified for the amount of fuel it would cost us – after all, our job is to reconnoiter bodies in the Kuiper belt with that fuel, not the asteroid belt.
As a result, we specifically decided not to target any asteroid, but after launch we did conduct a thorough search for chance encounters along our trajectory. Just the statistics of such chance encounters indicated that we might expect to pass perhaps 1 million to 3 million kilometers (620,000 to 1.8 million miles) from a small asteroid by chance as we transited the main belt. We found several such opportunities back in February.
As it turned out, we got more than what we expected: In early May we also discovered we’d pass within just 104,000 kilometers (63,000 miles) of the little-known asteroid 2002 JF56 on June 13. This little mountain-sized body is only 3 kilometers to 5 kilometers (1.9 miles to 3.1 miles) across, and virtually nothing is known about it – not even its compositional type or rotational period.
We cannot resolve something as small as 2002 JF56 from this distance with Ralph (LORRI, which has higher resolution cannot open its door until late August to guard against accidental Sun pointings), but the June 13 encounter with 2002 JF56 is still going to be useful to New Horizons.
The primary use of this distant flyby will be to test Ralph’s optical navigation and moving-target tracking capabilities. We also will be able to get a handle on the asteroid’s light curve, composition, phase curve, and perhaps even refine its diameter, if all goes as planned.
The event is really a flight test, so we aren’t guaranteeing anything but a best effort. If it works, you’ll see images that just barely resolve the asteroid into perhaps one or two pixels and perhaps a spectrum of this chip off some larger body.
More important, of course, we will gain some valuable experience that will yield benefits at both the Jupiter and Pluto flybys, so we’re excited to give this a try. Stay tuned, we’ll report on the results at mid-month on our Web site.
Other flight
activities for June will center on SWAP instrument testing, Ralph instrument calibrations and beam-mapping observations for our high gain antenna and REX (radio science) instrument.
By July Fourth, we’ll be 3 AU from the Sun. Although the sunlight there is still 100 times as strong as it is on the brightest day at Pluto, it’ll be about 10 times dimmer than at Earth’s orbit. Less than six months into a 114 month journey to Pluto, New Horizons is beginning to reach the cooler thermal conditions it was designed to thrive in!
That’s all I have for now. So, until next time, keep exploring.

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ISRO And DRDO Deal Differently With Disastrous Launches

ISRO And DRDO Deal Differently With Disastrous Launches

ISRO And DRDO Deal Differently With Disastrous Launches
File photo: The doomed Agni-III missile.by Staff WritersNew Delhi, India (PTI) Jul 18, 2006It was a Black Sunday and an even worse Monday for India’s aerospace ambitions. Two much-hyped rocket systems – one the guided missile Agni-III, and another the GSLV-FO2 launch vehicle carrying a satellite – built by two famed institutions, (RDO and ISRO, landed in the sea, drowning with them years of effort and hundreds of crores of rupees.

It was a rare back-to-back failure and ISRO chairman Madhavan Nair was forthright on what could have gone wrong: “The pressure in one of the four strap-on motors dropped to zero and did not develop enough thrust, as a result the vehicle veered off the trajectory,” he said, adding that the failure was “a rarest phenomena”.

“One of the liquid strap-ons had a workmanship problem with the engine valve, leading to a shutdown after one second,” a source revealed.

Unlike ISRO, who even after the failure showed a genuine eagerness to share available information, there was total silence from the DRDO. An indifferent defense minister summed up the situation: “The take-off was successful … but there was some problem later.”
Repeated efforts to talk to DRDO officials in Hyderabad met with no success, though one scientist did say there could have been a “component flaw, but even that would be premature to say”.

ISRO and DRDO are studies in contrast, two high-profile organizations heavily funded by public money and trying to meet India’s goals of self-reliance in critical technology. The difference is one seems to have learned from its failures and has a brilliant track record, while the other seems lost.

Much of ISRO’s talent and innovation has been used by DRDO for its missile program, “but the spirit and resilience of ISRO was never transferred to DRDO even though conceptually there is proximity between the two,” said a scientist who has worked in both organizations.
What makes ISRO different? “The one great thing about ISRO is that it is extremely open, people are committed, they have faith in themselves and a failure is seen as a learning curve. Our reviews are open,” said ex-ISRO chairman U.R. Rao.

“Nowhere in the world will you find another organization like ISRO,” said another official. “Everything is done here from end to end. We do R&D; build satellites and launch vehicles; meet the specific requirements of our users and also process data.”
Of the 21 launches ISRO has attempted in India, only five have failed, the last in April 1994. This is a highly respected success rate, even globally. At DRDO, however, the missile program has been the only effort that has met with some success.

Now, with Agni-III’s failure, the Integrated Guided Missile Program, which began in 1983, has suffered a major setback. The Agni test, said DRDO sources, was supposed to give a technical push to the intercontinental missile program.

“DRDO has got into the problem of talking big and delivering little,” said a scientist, recalling how in 2003 the much touted short-range surface-to-air missile Trishul was dumped. DRDO had worked on it for 18 years and spent nearly Rs 300 crore. Other missiles in the IGM program – Akash and Nag (promised long ago and yet to be delivered) – already have consumed thousands of crores.

It is ironic the DRDO was set up to cut down on arms imports via indigenization. A few years ago, President A.P.J. Abdul Kalam had spoken of 70 percent self-reliance in defense requirements by 2005. That date and year have passed, and India is still a long way away from that goal.

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China To Develop Deep Space Exploration In 5 Years

China To Develop Deep Space Exploration In 5 Years

China To Develop Deep Space Exploration In 5 Years
China hopes to send its spacecraft beyond the moon
Beijing, China (SPX) Jul 20, 2006
A senior Chinese space agency official said Wednesday that China would actively plan its deep space exploration over the next five years, focusing on lunar and Mars exploration.

Sun Laiyan, administrator of the China National Space Administration, said China would study the distribution and utilization of lunar resources and terrestrial planetary science as well as exploring scientific measures for supporting mankind’s sustainable survival on Earth.

Key research areas will also include astronomy and solar physics, space physics and solar system exploration, micro-gravity sciences and space life science.
Sun urged Chinese scientists to increase their understanding of star and universe evolution through the observation and study of the sun and black holes.

In the next five years, Sun said, China will independently develop and launch an astronomical satellite.

China will advance its exploration of the integral behavior of the chain reaction of solar-terrestrial space, establish a space weather forecast pattern on which a weather support system for space flight safety and communication will be based, he told the 36th Scientific Assembly of the Committee on Space Research.

Sun said, “Priorities shall be given to innovative projects on major scientific problems, and the emphases will be laid on Sun-Earth space environment study, solar system exploration and space astronomy.”

Sun’s administration is striving to establish an open, fair and scientific competition system for the selection of all space science projects, he said.
“We need to avoid unorganized competition by publicly collecting and evaluating proposals, and carrying out feasibility studies,” Sun said.

“We’ll also encourage and support other countries to join in the programs initiated by China in space science, and Chinese scientists will participate in international space science programs,” the administrator said.

During the 11th Five-Year (2006-2010) Program period, research into micro-gravity science will be coordinated with national scientific and technological strategic objectives.
This will promote the development of high technology for biological engineering and new materials and basic research on gravity theory and life science.

Chinese scientists have already conducted space experiments in astronomy, environment, microgravity fluid physics, material science, life science and earth science.
In February 2004, China initiated the Lunar Exploration Mission and started the research and development of the Chang’e lunar probe.

In October 2005, Shenzhou VI for the first time operated manned space lab experiments. China also launched four recoverable satellites.The results achieved through many years of research have laid a foundation for the fulfillment of space science development goals set out in the 11th Five-Year Program. After over ten years of advanced research on Space Solar Telescope and Space Hard X-Ray Modulation Telescope, scientists have tackled problems on key technologies and manufactured models of main components.

It is estimated that in the past decade, China’s space science investment, including infrastructure and programs, had exceeded 900 million yuan ($112.5 million).
The National High-Tech Research and Development Program initiated in the mid 1980s and the Manned Space flight Program begun in 1992 substantially promoted the development of China’s space research.

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