A senior Iranian official said Tehran is working on plans to build a spacecraft to send more living creatures into lower orbits in future.
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"The spacecraft's dimensions are 1 to 1.5 meters and it weighs 100kg," Mansour Kabganian, who is the Chief Director of Iran's national project for building the spaceship, told Fars News Agenca (FNA).
Mr. Kabganian said the spacecraft will be sent "to the lower orbit of Leo on the back of a home-made explorer" rocket. He described launch, orbiting, reentry and recovery of the spacecraft as the different phases foreseen in the project. He said that the same kind of spacecraft, but in different dimensions, is used for sending astronauts into the space.
In January 2013, Iran announced that it has sent a monkey into the space on the back of Pishgam (Pioneer) explorer rocket and that it has brought back and recovered the living cargo. Iran has already sent small animals into space - a rat, turtles and worms - aboard a capsule carried by its Kavoshgar-3 rocket in 2010.
The former Iranian defense minister said at the time that his ministry's Aerospace Industries Organization sent the living creature into space aboard an indigenous bio-capsule as a prelude to sending humans into space.
Iran, which first put a satellite into orbit in 2009, has outlined an ambitious space program and has, thus far, made giant progress in the field despite western sanctions and pressures against its advancement.
Iran has taken wide strides in aerospace. The country sent the first biocapsule of living creatures into space in February 2011, using its home-made Kavoshgar-3 (Explorer-3) carrier.
Former Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad announced in 2010 that Iran plans to send astronauts into space in 2024. But, later he said that the issue had gone under a second study at a cabinet meeting and that the cabinet had decided to implement the plan in 2019, five years earlier than the date envisaged in the original plan. ■