Source: BBC 
Mission: Described as a re-usable testbed for new sensors and other space technologies
Mission: Described as a re-usable testbed for new sensors and other space technologies
- Length: 9m (29ft); Wingspan: 4.5m (14ft); Height: 3m (9.5ft); Mass: 5t (11,000lb)
- Origins: Started as a Nasa project in 1999 before being handed to the military in 2006
- Flight history: First vehicle launched in April, 2010, and landed eight months later
- Cost: The budget line for the X-37B programme continues to be classified information
America’s classified X-37B spaceplane is probably spying on China, according to a report in Spaceflight magazine.
The unpiloted vehicle was launched into orbit by the US Air Force in March last year and has yet to return to Earth.
The
 Pentagon has steadfastly refused to discuss its mission but amateur 
space trackers have noted how its path around the globe is nearly 
identical to China’s spacelab, Tiangong-1.
There is wide speculation that the X-37B is eavesdropping on the laboratory.
“Space-to-space
 surveillance is a whole new ball game made possible by a finessed group
 of sensors and sensor suites, which we think the X-37B may be using to 
maintain a close watch on China’s nascent space station,” said Spaceflight editor Dr David Baker.
The
 X-37B, also known as the Orbital Test Vehicle (OTV), looks like a mini 
space shuttle and can glide back down through the atmosphere to land on a
 runway, just like Nasa’s re-usable manned spaceplane used to do before 
its retirement last July.
Built by Boeing, the Air Force’s robotic
 craft is about 9m long and has a payload bay volume similar to that of a
 small van. But what goes in the payload bay, the USAF will not discuss.
The
 current mission was launched on an Atlas rocket and put into a low 
orbit, a little over 300km up, with an inclination of 42.79 degrees with
 respect to the equator – an unusual profile for a US military mission 
which would normally go into an orbit that circles the poles.
The 
X-37B’s flight has since been followed from the ground by a dedicated 
group of optical tracking specialists in the US and Europe, intrigued by
 what the vehicle may be doing.
These individuals have watched how closely its orbit matches that of Tiangong.
The
 spacelab, which China expects to man with astronauts in 2012, was 
launched in September with an inclination of 42.78 degrees, and to a 
very similar altitude as the OTV.
 ”The parallels with X-37B are clear,” Dr Baker says in Spaceflight, the long established magazine of the British Interplanetary Society.
“With
 a period differential of about 19 seconds, the two vehicles will 
migrate toward or against each other, converging or diverging, roughly 
every 170 orbits.”
No-one can say for sure what sort of mission 
the spaceplane is pursuing; all the USAF has said is that the OTV is 
being used as a testbed for new technologies.
An artist’s impression of the recent Shenzhou capsule docking with Tiangong-1
But the suggestion any new sensors in the X-37B might take an interest in Tiangong’s telemetry is certainly an interesting one.
Washington
 retains a deep distrust of Beijing’s space ambitions – even its 
apparently straightforward human spaceflight missions.
Part of the
 problem is that China draws little distinction between its civilian and
 military programmes, unlike in other parts of the world, such as 
Europe, where the bloc’s space agency, Esa, is committed by charter to 
“exclusively peaceful” programmes. European military space projects are 
the preserve of national governments.
In the US, also, that distinction is pretty clear with Nasa being charged with the majority of civilian projects.
In China, on the other hand, the lines are more blurred and the military reaches across all its space programmes.
“If
 this is what the X-37B is doing, I think it really is no bad thing,” Dr
 Baker told BBC News. “As with the Cold War, the proliferation of space 
surveillance systems enabled us to get arms agreements that would not 
have been possible without each side knowing fully what the other side 
was doing.”
Tiangong-1 was launched in September
Not everyone is convinced by the latest analysis.
Brian Weeden is a technical adviser to the Secure World Foundation and a former orbital analyst with the USAF.
He published his own assessment last
 year of the X-37B’s capabilities and role as a platform to trial 
technologies before they are incorporated into a full-up spy satellite.
Mr Weeden still thinks the Middle East is a more likely target for any new sensors that the X-37B might be carrying.
“A typical spy satellite is in a polar orbit, which gives you access to the whole Earth,” he told BBC News.
“The
 X-37B is in a much lower inclination which means it can only see a very
 narrow band of latitudes, and the only thing that’s of real interest in
 that band is the Middle East and Afghanistan.
“Is it spying on 
Tiangong-1? I really don’t think so. I think the fact that their orbits 
intersect every now and again – that’s just a co-incidence. If the US 
really wanted to observe Tiangong, it has enough assets to do that 
without using X-37B.”
The latest edition of Spaceflight, with its analysis on the X-37B, is published this weekend.
 Tiangong-1 was launched in September on a Long March 2F rocket
- The unmanned laboratory unit was first put in a 350km-high orbit
- A Shenzhou 8 capsule rendezvoused and docked with Tiangong-1
- The encounter tested key technologies such as life-support systems
- Astronauts will visit Tiangong in 2012 in another Shenzhou vehicle
- China aims to start building a 60-tonne space station by about 2020

