Fiji Sun

China Launches Electromag­netic Satellite to Study Earthquake Precursors

Zhangheng 1 was funded by CNSA, developed by China Earthquake Administra­tion (CEA) and produced by DFH Satellite Co., Ltd., a subsidiary of China Academy of Space Technology (CAST).

- Detecting earthquake precursors Extreme magnetic cleanness

China on Friday launched its first seismo-electromag­netic satellite to study seismic precursors, which might help establish a ground-space earthquake monitoring and forecastin­g network in the future.

A Long March-2D rocket launched at 15:51 from Jiuquan Satellite Launch Centre, in northwest China’s Gobi Desert, carried the 730- kilogram China Se is mo Electromag­netic Satellite (CSES) into a sun-synchronou­s orbit at an altitude of about 500 kilometres. Known as Zhangheng 1 in Chinese, it will help scientists monitor the electromag­netic field, ionospheri­c plasma and high-energy particles for an expected mission life of five years, said Zhao Jian, a senior official with China National Space Administra­tion (CNSA).

The satellite is named after Zhang Heng, a renowned scholar of the East Han Dynasty (25-220), who pioneered earthquake studies by inventing the first ever seismoscop­e in the year 132. Zhangheng 1 will record electromag­netic data associated with earthquake­s above 6 magnitude in China and those above 7 magnitude around the world, in a bid to identify patterns in the electromag­netic disturbanc­es in the nearEarth environmen­t, Mr Zhao said. Covering the latitude area between 65 degrees north and 65 degrees south, it will focus on Chinese mainland, areas within 1,000 kilometres to China’s land borders and two major global earthquake belts.

Zhangheng 1 was funded by CNSA, developed by China Earthquake Administra­tion (CEA) and produced by DFH Satellite Co., Ltd., a subsidiary of China Academy of Space Technology (CAST). Based on a CAST2000 platform, Zhangheng 1 is a cubic satellite, 1.4 meters on each side. It has a single solar panel and six booms, which will deploy and keep electromag­netic detectors more than four metres away from the satellite, said Zhou Feng, a senior manager with DFH Satellite Company.

It carries a high-precision magnetomet­er, a search-coil magnetomet­er and electric field probes to measure components and intensity of the magnetic and electric fields. It is also equipped with a Langmuir probe, a plasma analyser, a GNSS occultatio­n receiver and a tri-band beacon to measure in-situ plasma and ionospheri­c profile as well, Mr Zhou said.

It also carries high-energy particle detectors, some of which are provided by Italian partners, and a magnetic field calibratio­n device developed in Austria, according to Mr Zhou. China is one of the countries most affected by dynamic earthquake­s, which are often widespread over terrain, high in magnitude and shallow in the epicentre. However, scientists around the world are still unable to predict earthquake­s despite efforts by various countries since the 1950s.

In recent years, more efforts have focused on monitoring se is mo electromag­netic anomalies in the near-Earth environmen­t. Research shows that just before a quake, tectonic forces acting on the Earth’s crust emit electromag­netic waves and twist magnetic field lines. But such electromag­netic phenomena are relatively weak and need further study to be useful.

Zhangheng 1 will help scientists better understand the coupling mechanisms of the upper atmosphere, ionosphere and magnetosph­ere and the temporal variations of the geomagneti­c field, and thus accumulate data for the research of seismic precursors, Mr Zhao said.

“Zhangheng 1 cannot be used to predict earthquake­s directly, but it will help prepare the research and technologi­es for a ground-space earthquake monitoring and forecastin­g system in the future,” he noted.

Shen Xuhui, deputy chief designer of Zhangheng 1, said it will gather enough data to build models of the Earth’s geomagneti­c field and ionosphere, which are still unknown to China. “Zhangheng 1, with a wider coverage and better electromag­netic environmen­t from space, will be an important supplement to earthquake monitoring in Qinghai-Tibet Plateau and sea areas that cannot be fully covered by the ground observatio­n network,” said Mr Shen, also chief engineer of the Institute of Crustal Dynamics of the CEA.

It will have access to more earthquake data, which will help identify patterns in pre-quake changes in the ionosphere via statistica­l analysis, Mr Shen added.

In order to better detect the minor ionospheri­c changes caused by quakes and accumulate data on high-energy particles, plasma and electromag­netic fields, Zhangheng 1 must be extremely clean, which means it shall make the sensors free of its own disturbanc­es in terms of magnetic fields and charging effects.

The mission requires the satellite’s own magnetism be controlled within 0.5 nT, which is equivalent to 1/100,000 of the background magnetic strength on the orbit. Zhangheng 1’s electromag­netic cleanlines­s eventually reached an unpreceden­ted 0.33 nT, through structural and design optimisati­on.

“We used hinged booms of nearly 5 meters with detectors on the far ends so as to decrease disturbanc­es from the satellite platform. We also limited the use of magnetic materials, and ran strict simulation and magnetic tests to calibrate its data,” said Yuan Shigeng, general director and chief designer of the satellite with CAST.

 ?? Photo: Xinhua ?? China launches its first seismoelec­tromagneti­c satellite, known as Zhangheng 1 from Jiuquan Satellite Launch Centre on February 2, 2018.
Photo: Xinhua China launches its first seismoelec­tromagneti­c satellite, known as Zhangheng 1 from Jiuquan Satellite Launch Centre on February 2, 2018.

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