China launched a spacecraft on Thursday carrying three astronauts to a new space station for the country’s longest crewed mission to date,...

China launched a spacecraft on Thursday carrying three astronauts to a new space station for the country’s longest crewed mission to date, Reuters reported. The astronauts were transported on a Long March-2F rocket to the Tiangong space station, where they will spend three months.
The rocket, transporting the Shenzhou-12 spacecraft, or “Divine Vessel”, bound for the space station module Tianhe blasted off at 9.22 am Beijing time (6.52 am IST) from the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center in northwestern Gansu province.
The spacecraft will dock with the Tianhe main section of the space station, which was placed in orbit on April 29, according to AFP.
The launch of #Shenzhou12 was described "as smooth as floating clouds and flowing water". pic.twitter.com/V0uqnThdht
— Hua Chunying 华春莹 (@SpokespersonCHN) June 17, 2021
Shenzhou-12 is the third of 11 missions, four of which will be crewed, needed to complete China’s first full-fledged space station. Construction began in April with the launch of Tianhe, the first and largest of three modules.
“It feels great,” said crew commander, 56-year-old Nie Haisheng, after reaching near-Earth orbit, according to the South China Morning Post. This is the third space mission of Nie, a decorated air force pilot in the People’s Liberation Army. Another veteran, Liu Boming, 54, and 45-year-old Tang Hongbo, on his first...