NewsSpace

China launches uncrewed Shenzhou capsule for 3 astronauts stuck on Tiangong space station (video)

Three Chinese astronauts won’t be “stranded” in orbit for much longer.

A Long March 2F/G rocket lifted off from the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center in northwest China tonight (Nov. 24) at 11:11 p.m. EST (0411 GMT and 12:11 p.m. on Nov. 25 Beijing time).

The rocket sent the Shenzhou 22 spacecraft toward China’s Tiangong space station in low Earth orbit, on a dramatic and unprecedented rescue mission.

A Long March 2F/G rocket launches the uncrewed Shenzhou 22 mission to the Tiangong space station on Nov. 24, 2025.

A Long March 2F/G rocket launches the uncrewed Shenzhou 22 mission to the Tiangong space station on Nov. 24, 2025. (Image credit: CCTV)

Shenzhou missions typically fly three astronauts to Tiangong, where they stay for six-month stints. However, the Shenzhou 22 vehicle is uncrewed, because it will serve as the ride home for the orbiting outpost’s three current residents.

Those astronauts are flying on the Shenzhou 21 mission, which arrived at Tiangong on Halloween night. But the spacecraft they rode up on is already gone; it was pressed into service to take their predecessors, the Shenzhou 20 trio, home on Nov. 14.

The Shenzhou 20 astronauts were supposed to leave Tiangong on Nov. 5, but inspections revealed a crack in the window of their spacecraft, the apparent consequence of an impact by a piece of space debris. Chinese space officials delayed the crew’s departure to analyze the issue, then ultimately deemed the Shenzhou 20 craft unsafe to take astronauts down to Earth.

view from an orbiting spacecraft looking down at earth, with parts of the spacecraft in the foreground

View from the uncrewed Shenzhou 22 spacecraft shortly after its launch on Nov. 24, 2025. (Image credit: CCTV)

So, for the past 10 days, the Shenzhou 21 astronauts have been in a somewhat precarious position: Should Tiangong suffer a serious problem, they have no way to safely evacuate.

That is about to change. Provided that Shenzhou 22 docks with Tiangong as planned about 4.5 hours after launch, the Shenzhou 21 astronauts will serve out the remainder of their half-year mission aboard the outpost. They will be relieved by the three astronauts of Shenzhou 23, which is expected to launch in April 2026.

The Shenzhou 20 capsule will need to leave before Shenzhou 23 arrives to free up a docking port. Chinese space officials have said the damaged spacecraft will remain in orbit for a spell to host some experiments, but they have not yet announced a timeline for its departure.

an orange-filled blue-outlined circle with chinese character around the edge and spacecraft symbolism in the center.

The Shenzhou 22 mission patch. (Image credit: China Manned Space)

The Shenzhou ordeal follows on the heels of another “stranded astronaut” saga. Boeing’s Starliner astronaut taxi experienced problems shortly after its June 2024 launch to the International Space Station (ISS) on its first-ever crewed flight, which was supposed to last just 10 days or so. NASA ultimately decided to bring the vehicle home uncrewed in September of that year, which happened without incident.

The two Starliner astronauts, NASA’s Suni Williams and Butch Wilmore, ended up staying on the ISS for more than nine months (though they were never actually stranded, as at least one functional “lifeboat” spacecraft was always attached to the ISS during their stay). The duo ultimately came home on a SpaceX Dragon capsule in March of this year.

The two off-nominal situations have increased calls in some quarters for a “space rescue service” — one that could help astronauts in need in a timely fashion, whichever country they may represent.


Author: Mike Wall
Source: Space.com
Reviewed By: Editorial Team

Related posts
NewsSpace

We don't mean to drone on but this five-star DJI Mini 4K drone is 20% cheaper for Black Friday

NewsSpace

Boeing's next Starliner spacecraft to fly won't carry NASA astronauts when it launches in April 2026

AI & RoboticsNews

Warner Music signs deal with AI music startup Suno, settles lawsuit

AI & RoboticsNews

OpenAI and Perplexity are launching AI shopping assistants, but competing startups aren’t sweating it

Sign up for our Newsletter and
stay informed!

Share Your Thoughts!

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.