China Daily (Hong Kong)

Rocket launches observatio­n satellite

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China launched a new Earth observatio­n satellite, Gaofen-6, on Saturday, mainly for use in agricultur­al research and disaster monitoring.

The Gaofen-6 was launched with a Long March-2D rocket at 12:13 pm from the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center in the Inner Mongolia autonomous region. Luojia-1, a scientific satellite, was blasted into space on the same rocket.

It was the 276th mission of the Long March rocket series.

Weighing 1,064 kilograms and with a designed life of eight years, Gaofen-6 has functions similar to those of Gaofen-1, but with better cameras. Its high-resolution images can cover a larger area, the State Administra­tion of Science, Technology and Industry for National Defense said.

Gaofen-6 can observe chloro- phyll and other nutritiona­l content of crops, and help predict yields of corn, rice, soybeans, cotton, peanuts and other commoditie­s, said Tong Xudong, chief engineer of the Gaofen satellite series.

Its data will also be applied in monitoring natural disasters such as droughts and floods, evaluating agricultur­al projects and surveying forest and wetland resources, Tong said.

Developed by China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporatio­n, it will orbit in a constellat­ion array with other Gaofen satellites.

Since the Gaofen project began in 2010, China has had an increasing­ly clearer view of the planet.

Gaofen-2, sent into space in August 2014, is accurate to 0.8 meters in full color and can collect multispect­ral images of objects greater than 3.2 meters in length.

Gaofen-4, launched in late 2015, is China’s first geosynchro­nous orbit, high-definition optical imaging satellite.

Gaofen-3, launched in August 2016, is China’s first synthetic aperture, radar-imaging satellite.

Gaofen-5, launched in May, has improved spectral resolution.

The project has helped reduce China’s dependence on foreign remote-sensing satellite data.

 ?? WANG JIANGBO / XINHUA ?? The Gaofen-6 Earth observatio­n satellite, atop a Long March-2D rocket, blasts off on Saturday.
WANG JIANGBO / XINHUA The Gaofen-6 Earth observatio­n satellite, atop a Long March-2D rocket, blasts off on Saturday.

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