Why Some Scientists Choose China’s Space Station for Research
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Through
a United Nations program called “Access to Space for All,” China has offered opportunities
for scientists from any country to get their experiments carried to the Tiangong
space station.
A project led by researchers
from a Swiss university highlights China’s ambition to make the Tiangong outpost
broadly available for science.
Seeking to burnish its
prestige in the world, China is portraying its Tiangong orbital outpost as a space
station that is available for scientists everywhere, not just for those who happen
to live in other countries with established space programs.
“We stand ready to conduct
more international cooperation and exchanges with countries and regions committed
to the peaceful use of outer space,” Wang Wenbin, a spokesman for the Chinese Foreign
Ministry, said in April.
For the International
Space Station — a partnership between NASA, Russia, Canada, the European Space Agency
and Japan that has been in orbit for more than two decades — the laboratory resources
are split among the partner nations, which then offer their scientists opportunities
to send experiments to the space station.
But scientists living
in countries that are outside of the partnership are generally shut out of the I.S.S.
Through a United Nations
program called “Access to Space for All,” China has offered opportunities for scientists
from any country to get their experiments carried to the Tiangong space station.
The United Nations announced
the first round of nine awards in 2019, which included projects from India, Japan,
Peru, Mexico and Saudi Arabia.
One of the selected experiments,
POLAR-2, is an international effort led by the University of Geneva to study distant
gamma-ray bursts.
Gamma-ray bursts are some
of the most violent explosions in the universe, caused by exploding stars or merging
neutron stars. The explosions send short, intense jets of ultra-high-energy photons
known as gamma rays traveling across the universe.
As its name suggests,
POLAR-2 is a follow-up to POLAR, a smaller detector that flew to an earlier, smaller
Chinese prototype space laboratory.
“Historically, University
of Geneva had a strong connection to Chinese research groups,” said Merlin Kole,
the project manager for POLAR-2, which is scheduled to be launched to Tiangong in
2025.
The experiment examines
whether gamma rays from a gamma-ray burst line up in a particular way. More than
a decade ago, measurements by an instrument on a Japanese spacecraft suggested that
gamma rays were often linearly polarized — that is, the oscillating electric fields
of the gamma rays were parallel to each other like a squadron of airplanes flying
level instead of with their wings skewed in every direction.
But the data from POLAR,
which flew in 2016, suggested that the gamma rays were unpolarized.
The POLAR scientists considered
how they could get a larger, follow-up detector launched to space. They decided
not to seek to build a dedicated satellite of their own.
“That would be much more
complex on the whole,” said Agnieszka Pollo, an astrophysicist at the National Center
for Nuclear Research in Poland and the principal investigator for the Polish part
of the POLAR-2 collaboration.
And the International
Space Station was also not considered viable because “there is a big competition
for that,” Dr. Pollo said, “and this is also not exactly so cheap and easy.”
So when the research opportunity
for Tiangong was announced, “Relatively quickly we were able to submit something,
and we got acceptance in the first round,” Dr. Kole said.
Tiangong’s high-speed
communications system will allow tens of gigabytes of data to be sent to the ground
each day. That will allow scientists to analyze all of the data that may contain
nuggets of discovery such as very weak gamma-ray bursts or other astrophysical events
that might otherwise be discarded as noise.
There is also a supercomputer
on the space station to analyze the data while it is still in space. That will allow
quick calculation of where a gamma-ray burst originated. That information could
then be shared with astronomers on the ground for rapid follow-up observations using
other telescopes, Dr. Kole said.
So far, the collaboration
with Chinese space officials has gone well, Dr. Kole said, although that can involve
wading through the Chinese bureaucracy.
“There are several agencies
involved, and we don’t talk to all of them directly,” he said. “So that makes it
a bit tricky at times. But when we really need to know something, we figure it out.”
Because the $2 million
instrument is largely being built in Europe and then shipped to China, the project
involves bureaucracy and paperwork with European officials, too.
“We’re not giving secrets,
of course,” Dr. Kole said. “All of the components are relatively easy and nothing
is secretive. It’s a scientific instrument. But, yeah, there’s no very clear bureaucratic
channel to do this properly.”