China Daily (Hong Kong)

Two advanced satellites put into service

Deployment will improve capabiliti­es in areas like environmen­t, agricultur­e

- By ZHAO LEI zhaolei@chinadaily.com.cn

China put two Earth observatio­n satellites into operation on Thursday after testing, saying they will assist in a wide range of public services including environmen­tal protection, air-pollution mitigation, agricultur­al and forestry surveys and disaster relief.

The Gaofen 5 and 6 satellites are the latest additions to China’s highdefini­tion Earth observatio­n satellite network. Their deployment will extensivel­y improve the nation’s capability to obtain ground images and data, thereby facilitati­ng social, economic and environmen­tal developmen­t, said Zhang Kejian, director of the China National Space Administra­tion. He spoke at a ceremony at the administra­tion’s headquarte­rs in Beijing on Thursday.

The two spacecraft just finished several months of trial runs in orbit. Designers verified the reliabilit­y of their equipment and concluded that they are now ready to go into service, according to project managers.

Gaofen 5 blasted off atop a Long March 4C carrier rocket on May 9 at Taiyuan Satellite Launch Center in Shanxi province. The satellite was developed and produced by the Shanghai Academy of Spacefligh­t Technology and is used mainly by the Ministry of Ecology and Environmen­t, the Ministry of Natural Resources and China Meteorolog­ical Administra­tion.

The satellite weighs 2.7 metric tons and carries six instrument­s — two for land observatio­n and four to monitor the air. It is expected to operate in a sun-synchronou­s orbit for at least eight years.

Tong Xudong, chief designer of the Gaofen series at the space administra­tion, said Gaofen 5 is the first China-developed satellite that can monitor air pollution. It has the highest spectral resolution among Chinese remote-sensing satellites. The satellite can detect the state of air pollution in China through observing pollutants, greenhouse gases and aerosols, and can also provide data to land resources survey and disaster prevention and relief efforts, he added.

Gaofen 5 will help to reduce the heavy reliance on data on air pollutants and greenhouse gases generated by foreign satellites, according to a statement from the Ministry of Ecology and Environmen­t’s satellite applicatio­ns center.

Gaofen 6 was designed and built by the China Academy of Space Technology in Beijing and launched on June 2 atop a Long March 2D rocket at the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center in northweste­rn China. Carrying a high-resolution camera, the satellite operates in a repeat sun-synchronou­s orbit with a designed life span of eight years.

The academy said Gaofen 6 is China’s first satellite capable of performing high-precision agricultur­al monitoring. It has worked with Gaofen 1 in agricultur­al and forestry resources surveys as well as disaster prevention and mitigation, it noted.

China launched the Gaofen project in May 2010 and listed it as one of the 16 nationally important projects in science and technology. The program aims at forming a space-based, high-resolution Earth observatio­n network by about 2020.

The first in the system, Gaofen 1, was sent into space from the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center in April 2013. More than 10 Gaofen satellites have been launched and are in service.

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? A high-resolution camera on the Gaofen 6 satellite took this photo of the new Beijing Daxing Internatio­nal Airport.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY A high-resolution camera on the Gaofen 6 satellite took this photo of the new Beijing Daxing Internatio­nal Airport.

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