CMS - China Manned Space logo.
April 16, 2023
The nation has reduced the amount of information it provides about its EVAs.
Image above: One of China's Shenzhou 15 astronauts works outside the Tiangong space station during the mission's third spacewalk, which the nation revealed on March 30, 2023. Image Credit: CCTV.
China's Shenzhou 15 astronauts completed their third spacewalk in late March under a cloud of secrecy.
Astronauts Fei Junlong and Zhang Lu exited the Tiangong space station sometime on March 30, with crewmate Deng Qingming assisting from inside the station.
China's human spaceflight agency, CMSA, only confirmed (opens in new tab) a day later that the extra vehicular activity (EVA) took place. No details of the EVA's times and tasks were published. The spacewalk followed the example of the mission's second EVA, which was only officially revealed on March 1, after it had occurred.
It is unclear if the new restricted levels of information relate to operational sensitivity or a change in policy.
The three Shenzhou 15 astronauts have been living in orbit since arriving at Tiangong in their Shenzhou spacecraft in late November last year.
Since then, the Shenzhou 15 crew has completed a range of tasks, including maintaining the pressurized habitat aboard Tiangong, carrying out repairs, conducting scientific experiments including testing a Stirling thermoelectric converter, and installing new equipment to allow deployment of cubesats from the Mengtian science module.
The crew will greet the arrival of the Shenzhou 16 mission astronauts to Tiangong in May and hand over control of the station. Fei, Zhang and Deng will then head back to Earth, having completed their six-month-long mission.
China is currently preparing to launch the Tianzhou 6 cargo spacecraft to Tiangong to provide supplies for the upcoming mission. A Long March 7 rocket arrived at a port close to the Wenchang Satellite Launch Center in recent days. 2023 will also see China launch the Shenzhou 17 crewed mission around late November.
Related links:
China space white paper: http://www.cnsa.gov.cn/english/n6465652/n6465653/c6813088/content.html
China National Space Administration (CNSA): http://www.cnsa.gov.cn/english/index.html
Image (mentioned), Video, Text, Credits: CNSA/CCTV/Space.com/By Andrew Jones.