The spacecraft blasted off at 6.37 p.m. June
15 from the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Centre.
The 33-year-old Liu Yang is one of China's two
women reserve astronauts. She is being accompanied
in her space journey by Jing Haipeng, a veteran
astronaut who was in the three-day Shenzhou VII
mission in 2008, and Liu Wang, a new face to the
public, China Daily reported.
Liu Yang was a People's Liberation Army Air Force
pilot with 1,680 hours of flying experience and
deputy head of a military flight unit before being
recruited as an astronaut candidate in May 2010.
She received two years of training, which shored
up her astronautic skills and adaptability to
space environment.
She excelled in testing and was selected this
March as a candidate for the Shenzhou-9 manned
space mission.
Over 50 women astronauts from seven countries
have gone into the space till date. The longest
space flight by female astronauts lasted 188 days.
The three Chinese astronauts will carry out the
country's first manned space docking mission,
an important step in the lead-up to building a
space station by 2020.
(IANS)
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