China Daily

Airline offers onboard high-speed internet

- By ZHAO LEI zhaolei@chinadaily.com.cn

China has started operating its first passenger jet that offers highspeed internet service on board, according to China Aerospace Science and Technology Corp, a State-owned space conglomera­te.

The aircraft is a modified Airbus A320 and is used by Qingdao Airlines’ QW9771 flight from Qingdao, Shandong province to Chengdu, Sichuan province.

Connected with the space giant’s communicat­ions satellite ChinaSat 16, also known as Shijian 13, the jet conducted the first high-speed-internet flight on Tuesday afternoon, transporti­ng government officials, contractor­s and representa­tives from enterprise­s involved in the program on a three-hour trip to Chengdu, the company said in a statement.

Passengers on the flight were given access to internet service at a speed of about 100 megabits per second, several times faster than other internet-available flights in China and as speedy as fixed-line service.

They were allowed to use their own mobile phones to connect to the internet, and some of them were invited to take part in the first onboard livestream­ing broadcast in China, the statement noted.

According to a statement published by Qingdao Airlines, modificati­ons on the aircraft began in November, and the first test flight was made in January. The plane’s certificat­ions and tests were conducted from December to June, it said.

ChinaSat 16, the first communicat­ions satellite in China using Ka-band broadband technology, was developed by the China Academy of Space Technology based on its DFH-3B communicat­ions satellite platform. It has been orbiting the Earth nearly 40,000 kilometers above the ground since it was launched into space atop a Long March 3B carrier rocket from the Xichang Satellite Launch Center in Sichuan province in April 2017.

The spacecraft had been dubbed by space authoritie­s as the country’s most advanced communicat­ions satellite before the Shijian 20, which was launched into space in December.

Weighing 4.6 metric tons, the satellite is expected to operate in a geostation­ary orbit for 15 years. It features a Ka-band broadband communicat­ions system capable of transmitti­ng 20 gigabits of data per second, exceeding the total capacity of all the country’s previous communicat­ions satellites.

It has conducted the world’s first experiment on high-orbit laser communicat­ion, a technology crucial to enabling a spacecraft to send, receive and transmit a large quantity of data with ground stations.

The fastest transmissi­on speed recorded during the experiment was 5 gigabits of data per second, which means a user could download a high-resolution movie from the spacecraft in only one second.

Wang Min, deputy head of the Institute of Telecommun­ication Satellite under the space technology academy, previously said China plans to establish an advanced communicat­ions satellite network by 2025 and, once it is complete, people will be able to use high-quality Wi-Fi service anywhere and anytime, including on other planes and bullet trains.

 ?? LI JIAJIA / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? A flight attendant conducts a livestream session during a flight from Qingdao, Shandong province, to Chengdu, Sichuan province, on Tuesday.
LI JIAJIA / FOR CHINA DAILY A flight attendant conducts a livestream session during a flight from Qingdao, Shandong province, to Chengdu, Sichuan province, on Tuesday.

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