China Daily

Earth-observatio­n satellite commission­ed

- By ZHAO LEI zhaolei@chinadaily.com.cn

The China National Space Administra­tion formally commission­ed an advanced Earth-observatio­n satellite on Tuesday afternoon.

At a commission­ing ceremony in Beijing, officials from the space administra­tion and the spacecraft’s users including the Ministry of Ecology and Environmen­t, the Ministry of Natural Resources and the China Meteorolog­ical Administra­tion signed a certificat­e to open formal operations of the Hyperspect­ral Multifunct­ional Observatio­n Satellite, also known as Gaofen 5-01A.

Several world-class apparatuse­s on the satellite, including a wide thermal infrared imager and an advanced hyper-spectral imager, will help scientists track greenhouse gases such as nitrogen dioxide and ozone, monitor water quality in lakes and rivers, and look for minerals and other resources, the administra­tion said in a news release.

Data obtained by the spacecraft will support China’s efforts to protect its ecosystems and natural resources and to respond to climate change, according to mission planners.

At the event, the administra­tion released products created using data collected by the satellite, such as maps of the global ozonecolum­n concentrat­ion, global nitrogen dioxide-column concentrat­ion, soil moisture and water quality.

Launched by a Long March 2D carrier rocket from the Taiyuan Satellite Launch Center in Shanxi province in December 2022, the satellite now travels in a sun-synchronou­s orbit 705 kilometers above the ground.

The satellite was built by the Shanghai Academy of Spacefligh­t Technology.

During its trial operation, ground controller­s carried out tests on its equipment and checked its overall capability, the administra­tion said.

By Tuesday, the satellite had transmitte­d 245 terabytes of data, including nearly 86,000 remotesens­ing images, back to ground control.

Zhao Jian, director of the space administra­tion’s Earth Observatio­n and Data Center, said that during the satellite’s research and developmen­t, designers worked out several new technologi­es to give it self-calibratio­n and highperfor­mance data processing capabiliti­es.

“Through the in-orbit tests and assessment, it is fair to say that the satellite’s accuracy of radiometri­c and spectral calibratio­ns and its imaging quality and stability are the best of their kinds,” he told reporters after the commission­ing ceremony.

“It will also play an important role in bolstering internatio­nal cooperatio­n by providing data support to scientists around the world for their climate change research,” Zhao noted.

China launched the Gaofen program in May 2010 and listed it as one of 16 nationally important projects in science and technology. At present, the program has placed more than 20 satellites in active service.

Images and data from the Gaofen high-resolution Earth observatio­n network have been widely used by thousands of research bodies and enterprise­s in 28 industries across China and have helped reduce the country’s dependence on foreign remotesens­ing products.

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