Tiangong-1
| Model of Tiangong-1 with docked Shenzhou crewed spacecraft. | |
| Station statistics | |
|---|---|
| COSPAR ID | 2011-053A | 
| SATCAT no. | 37820 | 
| Launch | 29 September 2011, 13:16:03.507 UTC | 
| Carrier rocket | Long March 2F/G | 
| Launch pad | Jiuquan, LA-4/SLS-1 | 
| Reentry | 2 April 2018, 00:16 UTC 2 April 2018 00:15 UTC (China Manned Space Engineering Office) | 
| Mission status | Deorbited | 
| Mass | 8,506 kg (18,753 lb) | 
| Length | 10.4 m (34 ft) | 
| Diameter | 3.35 m (11.0 ft) | 
| Pressurised volume | 15 m3 (530 cu ft) | 
| Days occupied | 20 days, 18.5 hours (Hatch open to hatch closed) | 
| Configuration | |
| Plan diagram of Tiangong-1 with solar panels extended | |
| Tiangong-1 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
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| Simplified Chinese | 天宫一号 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
| Traditional Chinese | 天宮一號 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
| Literal meaning | Celestial Palace 1 or Heavenly Palace 1 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
| 
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| Target Vehicle | |||||||||||||||||||||||
| Simplified Chinese | 目标飞行器 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
| Traditional Chinese | 目標飛行器 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
| Literal meaning | Target Vehicle | ||||||||||||||||||||||
| 
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Tiangong-1 (Chinese: 天宫一号; pinyin: Tiāngōng yīhào; lit. 'Heavenly Palace 1" or "Celestial Palace 1') was China's first prototype space station. It orbited Earth from September 2011 to April 2018, serving as both a crewed laboratory and an experimental testbed to demonstrate orbital rendezvous and docking capabilities during its two years of active operational life.
Launched uncrewed aboard a Long March 2F launch vehicle on 29 September 2011, it was the first operational component of the Tiangong program, which launched a larger, modular station into orbit in 2021. Tiangong-1 was initially projected to be deorbited in 2013, to be replaced over the following decade by the larger Tiangong-2 and Tiangong-3 space stations, but it orbited until 2 April 2018.
Tiangong-1 was visited by a series of Shenzhou spacecraft during its two-year operational lifetime. The first of these, the uncrewed Shenzhou 8, successfully docked with the module in November 2011, while the crewed Shenzhou 9 mission docked in June 2012. A third and final mission to Tiangong-1, the crewed Shenzhou 10, docked in June 2013. The crewed missions to Tiangong-1 were notable for including China's first female astronauts, Liu Yang and Wang Yaping.
On 21 March 2016, after a lifespan extended by two years, the China Manned Space Engineering Office announced that Tiangong-1 had officially ended its service. They went on to state that the telemetry link with Tiangong-1 had been lost. A couple of months later, amateur satellite trackers watching Tiangong-1 found that China's space agency had lost control of the station. In September 2016, after conceding they had lost control over the station, officials speculated that the station would re-enter and burn up in the atmosphere late in 2017. According to the China Manned Space Engineering Office, Tiangong-1 started reentry over the southern Pacific Ocean, northwest of Tahiti, on 2 April 2018 at 00:16 UTC.