Updated
Updated · Space.com · May 23
China Launches Shenzhou 23 With 3 Astronauts, Including Hong Kong's First Spaceflier
Updated
Updated · Space.com · May 23

China Launches Shenzhou 23 With 3 Astronauts, Including Hong Kong's First Spaceflier

7 articles · Updated · Space.com · May 23
  • Sunday's Shenzhou 23 launch will send Zhu Yangzhu, Zhang Zhiyuan and Lai Ka-ying to Tiangong for a six-month handover mission; Lai will become the first astronaut from Hong Kong to reach space.
  • One of the three is expected to remain in orbit for 1 year—China's first such mission—because a Pakistani astronaut due on Shenzhou 24 will later take that crew member's return seat.
  • The flight will relieve the Shenzhou 21 crew, whose stay ran about a month long after suspected debris damage forced their Shenzhou 20 colleagues to use the Shenzhou 21 spacecraft to return.
  • China sent uncrewed Shenzhou 22 as a replacement lifeboat, with the delayed Shenzhou 21 astronauts now scheduled to come home on May 29.
  • Shenzhou 23, launching at 1508 GMT from Jiuquan, will be Tiangong's 11th crewed mission and follows Tianzhou 10's May 11 delivery of nearly 7 tons of supplies.
What challenges will China’s first year-long astronaut face after the unique international crew swap?
After a near-disaster, how will China protect its astronauts from the growing threat of orbital debris?
Which nations will join China's space station next, creating a new rival to the ISS?

China’s Shenzhou-23: Pioneering a Year-Long Space Residency and Welcoming Hong Kong’s First Astronaut

Overview

The Shenzhou-23 mission, launching on May 24, 2026, marks a major milestone as the seventh crewed mission in the development of China’s space station and the 40th in its manned space program. The three-person crew includes Zhu Yangzhu, an experienced astronaut, Zhang Zhiyuan, a first-time space traveler, and Lai Ka-ying, the first astronaut from Hong Kong. This mission highlights China’s growing expertise in long-duration spaceflight and its commitment to integrating talent from across the country, reflecting both technological progress and national unity in advancing its ambitious space goals.

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