Shanghai Daily

Love navigated by Beidou satellites

- Yu Fei and Qu Ting

They provide positionin­g and navigation to vehicles, ships, shared bicycles and drones, as well as tracking wild animals, and China’s Beidou satellites have also guided a young couple to love.

Ten years ago, Cui Bo, a designer for the Beidou power system, wrote a poem lauding those dedicated to space exploratio­n to mark the 40th anniversar­y of the founding of the China Academy of Space Technology (CAST). He met his colleague Wang Lu, who recited his poem at the anniversar­y ceremony.

Wang, a designer for the Beidou payloads, was just like the people in his poem: dedicating all her knowledge and efforts to the developmen­t of China’s own satellites. They fell in love.

They, in fact, both graduated from Beihang University, which specialize­s in aeronautic­al and astronauti­cal education and research, but they hadn’t known each other then.

Named after the Chinese term for the Big Dipper constellat­ion, Beidou is a rival to the US GPS system, Russia’s GLONASS and the European Union’s Galileo as a global satellite navigation system.

When China launched its first Beidou satellite in 2000, Wang and Cui watched the live broadcast of the liftoff on television at the university.

After graduation, they both had offers of high-paying jobs, but they both chose the CAST.

“We chose to work here because we share a space dream,” Wang says.

“We watched the launch of the first Beidou satellite at the same time, and now we are participat­ing in the developmen­t of more Beidou satellites,” Cui says. “It’s our destiny.”

Engaging in the developmen­t of the second generation of Beidou satellites, they worked together in the production of the first inclined geosynchro­nous orbit satellite, which was key to global coverage.

The pressure of work brought out the best in each other.

“He is enthusiast­ic about his work. He often dugs into a problem for a long time. He is also warm-hearted, sometimes he would design a simple program to share with his team to improve efficiency,” Wang recalls. “He’s cool.”

“She is very smart,” says Cui. “Once I took a long time solving a geometric problem, she took only 30 seconds to show me a simpler and ingenious solution. She’s even cooler than me!”

The pursuit of the same dream binds them.

The second generation of Beidou satellites began operating at the end of 2012. The system, then with 14 satellites, provided navigation, positionin­g and timing services to the Asia-Pacific region. The same year, Wang and Cui got married.

The research team is responsibl­e for the developmen­t of the satellites as well as in-orbit tests. If a satellite has a problem, they must resolve it quickly.

In September 2015, Cui was sent to Xi’an, capital of Shaanxi Province, some 1,000 kilometers from Beijing, to work on the flight controls of a newly launched satellite. He couldn’t return home for their baby son’s 100-day celebratio­n, which is an important occasion in Chinese tradition. Wang, instead, took the baby to Xi’an, so that the three of them could celebrate together.

“I will never forget the moment I saw her coming, with our baby sleeping in her arm, dragging heavy luggage with the other,” Cui says.

Since 2017, China has sent eight Beidou-3 satellites into space. By the end of 2018, the Beidou system will service countries along the Belt and Road route.

Young space engineers like Wang and Cui are the backbone of the system. The average age of the Beidou team in the CAST is 36.

Over the past five years, the system has helped rescue more than 10,000 fishermen. More than 40,000 fishing vessels and around 4.8 million commercial vehicles in China are equipped with Beidou.

The system has lifted the output of precision agricultur­e by 5 percent, and curbed oil consumptio­n by 10 percent. Beidou is also helping monitor the structural integrity of highways, pipelines, dams and bridges.

It is also part of the daily life. More than 300 million mobile phones, 40 percent of all smart phones in China, can connect to Beidou.

The system now covers more than 50 countries with a total population of more than 3 billion. By 2020, Beidou will have more than 30 satellites, providing firstclass services around the globe.

 ??  ?? Above: A Long March-3A carrier rocket carrying the 32nd Beidou navigation satellite lifts off from the launch pad in Xichang, Sichuan Province. — IC
Above: A Long March-3A carrier rocket carrying the 32nd Beidou navigation satellite lifts off from the launch pad in Xichang, Sichuan Province. — IC
 ??  ?? Left: Engineers make further testing before launching a new Beidou satellite.
Left: Engineers make further testing before launching a new Beidou satellite.
 ??  ?? Cui Bo with his wife Wang Lu and young son
Cui Bo with his wife Wang Lu and young son

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