China’s first female astronaut is returning to work after giving birth, the Associated Press reports.
Liu Yang, 37, confirmed at an awards ceremony this week that she recently had a baby, but revealed nothing else about the newborn. The focus instead was on Yang’s next mission — she has begun training for an attempt to dock with a future space station.
The astronaut’s baby news could reflect a shift for China’s space program. When China invited its first two women astronauts on board in 2010, it was widely reported that married women with children were given preference, supposedly to protect women who may want children against radiation damaging their reproductive health. The claim, however, lacks scientific evidence, and many female astronauts from other countries have given birth after completing missions.
Additionally, TIME magazine reported in 2010 that the requirement was in place because, according to a former deputy commander of China’s space program, “married woman are more physically and psychologically mature.”









