Re: parravinci 7 - 15 - Mondflug
Geschrieben von mica am 21. Mai 2002 17:00:22:
Als Antwort auf: parravinci 7 - 15 geschrieben von Guerrero am 20. Mai 2002 13:42:51:
>10. En el final de la prueba. El naviero terráqueo viajarà a la luna, portará fáciles argumentos de observaciòn, mas olvidarà gallos de alba para el despertar lunar.
>Serán dormidos sin remedio alguno y su sueno los adormira en tiempos. (1967)
>Am Ende der Prüfung. (Test) Der Erdenflugschiffer wird zum Mond reisen, führt (bringt) einfache (genaue)ingeniöse (Geräte)der Überwachung (Beobachtung), jedoch wird vergessen Hähne zum Aufwecken vom Mondschlaf.
>Sie werden schlafen ohne irgend ein Gegenmittel, und sein Traum wird lange Zeit schlafen.
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>Scheinbar wird noch ein 2. bemannter Mondflug durchgeführt. Jedoch geht das schief und der Traum von Weltraumflug der Menschen wird lange Zeit ruhen.
>Hab was gelesen von den Vorbereitungen zu einem Mondflug. Weiss jemand etwas darüber? guerrero
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Hallo Guerrero,folgendes habe ich gefunden, zu obiger Mondflug-Prophezeiung
China plans Moon base for 2010
13:46 20 May 02NewScientist.com news service
China's ambitious space plans have been extended to building a base on the Moon starting in 2010, a Chinese space official has said. Before that the fledgling space power aims to complete a number of manned missions into space and to establishing an orbiting "space laboratory".
In a lecture in Beijing during China's National Science week, Ouyang Ziyuan, chief scientist with China's Moon programme, outlined the country's bold space strategy."China is expected to complete its first exploration of the moon in 2010 and will establish a base on the moon as we did in the South Pole and the North Pole." China Daily quotes Ziyuan as saying. He did not say whether China's mission to the Moon would be manned.
James Oberg, a veteran of the US space programme and an authority on manned space flight, says China is unlikely to send astronauts to the Moon.
"They don't have the budget or the technology," Oberg told New Scientist. "Their whole approach has been remarkably cautious. Robot missions make much more sense." But Oberg believes China could feasibly construct a small space station.
China has so far completed three unmanned test flights with its Shenzhou spacecraft and intends to place the first Chinese astronaut in space by 2005. This would make China only the third nation to achieve the feat, after Russia and the US.
Twelve people have been selected to become China's first generation of "taikonauts" and are undergoing training.
Liebe Grüße
mica
- Re: parravinci 7 - 15 - Mondflug Guerrero 21.5.2002 21:57 (0)