Background Tiangong-1 was originally intended to be launched in August 2011, and was delivered to the
Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center on 23 July 2011, successfully passing a launch rehearsal test on 17 August 2011.
Orbital transfers and testing On 30 September 2011, Tiangong-1 completed the second of two
orbital maneuvers, reaching an
apogee altitude of . This was the precursor to a week-long program of orbital testing, conducted from the
Beijing Aerospace Command and Control Center, to prepare the module for future orbital docking operations.
Autonomous orbital docking The uncrewed
Shenzhou 8 mission successfully docked with Tiangong-1 on 2 November 2011
UTC, marking China's first orbital docking. Shenzhou 8 undocked from Tiangong-1 on 14 November 2011, before successfully completing a second rendezvous and docking, thus testing the reusability of the docking system. Shenzhou 8 deorbited on 17 November 2011, and landed intact in
Siziwang Banner in
Inner Mongolia. After the mission, the CNSA reported that Tiangong-1's systems were in optimal condition.
Crewed missions Preparations In December 2011, the Tiangong-1 module began automated internal checks for toxic gas, to ensure that its interior would be safe for astronauts to enter. In January 2012, reports emerged in British publication
Spaceflight alleging that the American
Boeing X-37B robotic
spaceplane was shadowing Tiangong-1 for surveillance purposes. However, former
United States Air Force orbital analyst Brian Weeden later refuted this claim, emphasizing that the X-37B occupied a 100 degree right ascension offset orbit from Tiangong-1, and would not be able to closely observe the module as they would only pass each other twice an orbit at a closing speed of 7 km/s.
Shenzhou 9 (Expedition 1) , China's first female astronaut, is shown on the right. In March 2012, it was reported that China had finished the initial crew selection for the
Shenzhou 9 mission. Niu Hongguang, the deputy chief commander of the
China Manned Space Engineering Office, stated that Shenzhou 9 would dock with Tiangong-1 before August 2012. The Shenzhou 9 spacecraft was delivered to
Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center for launch preparations on 9 April 2012, while its
Long March 2F launch vehicle arrived a month later on 9 May 2012. Shenzhou 9 launched successfully on 16 June 2012, carrying with it China's first female astronaut,
Liu Yang. The spacecraft docked with Tiangong-1 on 18 June 2012 at 06:07 UTC (14:07 Beijing time). After about three hours, when the air pressures inside the two vessels were equalized, mission commander
Jing Haipeng entered Tiangong-1. The first docking was entirely computer-controlled, without input from the three astronauts; Shenzhou 9 landed safely in Inner Mongolia on 29 June 2012. In August 2012, Shenzhou 9's crew travelled to
Hong Kong to discuss their mission with university students.
Shenzhou 10 (Expedition 2) The crewed
Shenzhou 10 spacecraft, the final Shenzhou mission to rendezvous with Tiangong-1 before its deorbit, was launched on 11 June 2013. The launch of Shenzhou 10 was originally planned for earlier in the year, but was delayed to allow the mission to incorporate more complex scientific experiments. The mission's crew included China's second female astronaut,
Wang Yaping. On 15 June 2013, the Shenzhou 10 crew completed China's first orbital maintenance operation, replacing Tiangong-1's interior cladding. Additional maintenance work was conducted on the space station's seal rings. On 24 June 2013,
CPC general secretary Xi Jinping contacted the astronauts via remote video link to congratulate them. After a series of successful docking tests, Shenzhou 10 undocked and returned safely to Earth on 26 June 2013. With a duration of 15 days, Shenzhou 10 was China's longest crewed space mission, until
Shenzhou 11's 30-day mission to
Tiangong-2 in 2016. == Post-mission ==