A Tianzhou-4 spacecraft docks with China's under-construction space station, as seen on a video screen at the Beijing Aerospace Control Center in Beijing, on May 10, 2022. - Xinhua
BEIJING (Reuters): An unmanned Chinese cargo spacecraft successfully docked with an orbiting space station module on Tuesday (May 10) in the sixth of 11 missions needed to finish building China's first space station by the end of the year.
A Long March-7 rocket carrying the Tianzhou-4 spacecraft blasted off at 1:56 a.m. Beijing time (1756 GMT Monday) from the Wenchang Space Launch Centre in southern Hainan province.
Tianzhou-4 docked with Tianhe, the core module of the space station, at 8.54am Beijing time (0054 GMT), China Manned Space Agency said on Tuesday.
The cargo spacecraft transported propellants, application experiments samples, some payloads and supplies for three astronauts, the agency said.
Three astronauts will travel to Tianhe in June on the Shenzhou-14 spacecraft and live and work onboard the module for six months.
China aims to complete the construction of its first space station this year, being a key rival of the world's only station - Nasa's International Space Station.