Ren Xinmin

Ren Xinmin (Chinese: 任新民; pinyin: Rén Xīnmín; Wade–Giles: Jen Hsin-min; 5 December 1915 – 12 February 2017) was a Chinese aerospace engineer and a specialist in astronautics and liquid rocket engine technology. He was the technical director of the Long March 1 rocket, which launched the Dong Fang Hong I, China's first satellite, and the chief designer of Chinese storable propellant rocket engine.[1] He was also the chief designer for Long March 3 launch vehicle, Fengyun, and SJ (Shijian) series satellites.[2]

Ren Xinmin
Born(1915-12-05)5 December 1915
Ningguo, Anhui, China
Died12 February 2017(2017-02-12) (aged 101)
Alma materNational Central University
Chongqing Ordnance School affiliated to Military Ministry
University of Michigan
Known forparticipant in the Two Bombs, One Satellite Project
Scientific career
FieldsAeronautics
InstitutionsUniversity at Buffalo
Institute of Military Engineering
China Aerospace Science & Technology Corporation

Together with Huang Weilu, Tu Shou'e and Liang Shoupan, Ren was considered one of the "Four Elders of China's Aerospace", only surpassed by Qian Xuesen, the founder of China's aerospace industry.[3] He was awarded the Two Bombs, One Satellite Merit Medal in 1999.[4] Ren was elected a member of the Chinese Academy of Sciences in 1980.[2]

Early life and education

Ren Xinmin was born on 5 December 1915 in Ningguo, Anhui Province.[2][3] When he was a middle school student, he joined the Communist Youth League. He studied chemical engineering at the National Central University in Nanjing. After the outbreak of the Second Sino-Japanese War in 1937, he took refuge in Chongqing where he studied gun design at the National Institute of Technology, Ministry of Military Administration. He worked at an armoury after graduation in 1940. Ren attended University of Michigan in 1945, where he obtained his MS and PhD.[2][5]

Career

After the Second World War, Ren read a book authored by Qian that roused his interest in rocket science. When he returned to China in 1949, he arrived in Nanjing and was offered a research fellowship until 1952, when he left for Harbin. In those three years, Ren and his colleagues attempted to launch a tiny rocket, though experimentation was never completed.[5]

Despite Ren's specialisation in mechanical engineering, he was appointed as the director of rocket teaching and research section to teach solid-propellant rocket course at Institute of Military Engineering.[3]

Then Ren was recruited by the Fifth Academy of the Ministry of Defence in 1956. His first task was incorporating the design and technology to replicate the R-2 rocket with the assistance of Soviet experts. Dongfeng 1 was a licensed version of the R-2 with limited maximum range was launched smoothly in 1960. Ren was appointed as the chief designer and helped developed the Dongfeng 2, a medium-range rocket in 1961.[3]

A colleague recalled, in a 2014 documentary, Ren leading a successful five-day march in 1967 in the cold western desert seeking a downed test rocket as one anecdote from his long career.[6]

Ren served as Vice Minister of the Seventh Ministry of Machine Building from 1975 until 1982, when he was moved to Ministry of Aerospace Industry. There the 331 Project, to build and launch a communication satellite, was successfully implemented. Ren was in charge of its five sections as chief engineer;[7] he was nicknamed the "Chief Chief Engineer (总总师)".[3]

Ren's insistence on applying LOX/LH2 rocket engines led to the success of the Long March 3 in 1984, even though he had suffered numerous failures, and then faced the resulting backlash. He had also been a dedicated promoter of China's manned spaceflight and space station projects since the 1980s.[8]

Personal life

Ren married Yu Shuangqin (Chinese: 虞霜琴), the daughter of a Nationalist government official, in 1944.[9]

Ren died on 12 February 2017 in Beijing, aged 101 (102 in East Asian age reckoning).[3] His wife and children survived him.[6]

gollark: You can't send information faster than light with quantum entanglement (or quite possibly at all), and systems which can use magic ultra-secure communications channels will not magically be immune to hacking.
gollark: Apparently lockpicks are pretty cheap and most locks are terrible and quite vulnerable to them. Which is worrying.
gollark: What's a "GE supervirus"?
gollark: That probably crosses into politics somewhat?
gollark: Oh, the thing with... rescuing Freya, or whatever, if I remember right?

References

  1. "百岁任新民中国航天的总总师". China Space News (in Chinese). 9 December 2015.
  2. "Ren Xinmin". Encyclopedia Astronautica.
  3. Zhang, Zhihao (14 February 2017). "Top rocket scientist dies, age 102". China Daily.
  4. "Founder of Chinese space industry Ren Xinmin dies at 102". China Radio International.
  5. "从"两弹一星"到载人航天:访任新民同志" (in Chinese). 14 August 2014.
  6. Ives, Mike, 'Ren Xinmin, Pioneering Chinese Satellite Designer, Dies at 101", New York Times, 16 February 2017. Retrieved 18 February 2017.
  7. "回顾331工程——国卫星通信工程发展 明灯玉宇傲苍穹" (in Chinese).
  8. "航天传奇任新民". China Science Daily (in Chinese). 11 October 2013.
  9. "航天泰斗任新民" (in Chinese).
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