Fiji Sun

KZ-1A rocket launches two satellites

- nemani.delaibatik­i@fijisun.com.fj

Jiuquan: Two satellites for technologi­cal experiment­s were sent into space by a Kuaizhou-1A, or KZ-1A, carrier rocket from the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Centre in northwest China on Saturday.

The rocket blasted off at 7:41am and sent the two satellites into their planned orbit.

Kuaizhou-1A, meaning speedy vessel, is a low-cost solid-fuel carrier rocket with high reliabilit­y and a short preparatio­n period. The rocket, developed by a company under the China Aerospace Science and Industry Corporatio­n, is mainly used to launch low-orbit microsatel­lites.

Saturday’s launch was the third mission of the KZ-1A rocket.

One of the newly launched satellites was developed by the Innovation Academy for Microsatel­lites of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS), and will be used for microgravi­ty technology experiment­s.

It will conduct on-orbit experiment­s on ultra-high precision control and measuremen­t technologi­es under microgravi­ty conditions, according to the CAS.

The technologi­es will lay a solid foundation for space science tasks and frontier basic science research, such as space-based gravitatio­nal wave detection and ultra-high precision inertial navigation, CAS said.

The other satellite, developed by Spacety Co., Ltd. (Changsha), a privately owned Chinese commercial space company, will be used to test solar sail technology.

The microgravi­ty technology experiment satellite belongs to the second phase of a space science program of the CAS. During the first phase, a series of space science satellites have been sent into space, including the DAMPE to search for dark matter, the world’s first quantum satellite and the HXMT, China’s first X-ray space telescope. In the coming three to four years, China plans to launch new space science satellites including the Gravitatio­nal Wave Electromag­netic Counterpar­t All-sky Monitor (GECAM), the Advanced Spaceborne Solar Observator­y (ASO-S), the Einstein-Probe (EP) and the Solar wind Magnetosph­ere Ionosphere Link Explorer (SMILE) to study gravitatio­nal waves, black holes, the relationsh­ip between the solar system and humanity, and the origin and evolution of the universe.

 ??  ?? KZ-1A rocket.
KZ-1A rocket.

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