China launches Shenzhou X manned spacecraft with three astronauts.
Astronaut Wang Yaping wowed millions of students on Thursday when she held China's first science lesson from space.Space teachers exchange letter
More than 100 other disabled students watched a lecture hosted by Chinese astronaut Yaping from the Shenzhou-X spacecraft on Thursday morning.
Students and teachers at China's 80,000 middle schools experienced something out of this world during a special class delivered by China's first teacher in space from more than 300 kilometers above the Earth surface on Thursday. Here chinadaily.com.cn shares with you about what they said about the lecture out of this world.
China's Chang'e-3 lunar probe with its first moon rover "Yutu" (Jade Rabbit) aboard blasted off from the Xichang Satellite Launch Center early Monday.
After wrapping up her first lecture in space on Thursday, Chinese astronaut Wang Yaping replied to a letter from former US astronaut Barbara Morgan.
In China's first "space class", the country's second female astronaut in space Thursday says she and her crewmates haven't seen any UFOs during the space trip.
China's three astronauts sent best regards to students back on the Earth at the end of the country's first "space class".
A special lecture began Thursday morning, given by China's first teacher in space Wang Yaping aboard space module Tiangong-1 to students on Earth.
No UFOs yet About Wang Yaping
Students, teachers take pleasure in lecture
Astronauts on board the Shenzhou-X spacecraft will teach students through a live video feed system while in orbit at about 10 am on Thursday, announced a spokesperson for China's manned space program on Wednesday.
Chinese woman astronaut Wang Yaping will carry out fundamental physics experiments on board the orbiting Tiangong-1 space module at around 10 am on Thursday.
China's first teacher in space Wang Yaping is in orbit and due to deliver a lecture to students via a video feed on Thursday.A letter to China's first space teacher
China's manned space program has achieved rapid development in a "less costly way," a US astrophysicist said Sunday.