China Daily

Relay satellite ready for lunar mission service

Queqiao 2 to provide communicat­ion support for operations on moon’s far side

- By ZHAO LEI zhaolei@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s relay satellite Queqiao 2, or Magpie Bridge 2, is ready to provide communicat­ion service to missions operating on the moon’s far side, according to the China National Space Administra­tion.

The administra­tion said in a news release on Friday morning that the spacecraft has finished in-orbit communicat­ion tests. Ground controller­s assessed the results and determined that the satellite’s framework and mission payloads had been running normally. Its capability and performanc­e have proved to be good enough for signal relay tasks for Chinese and foreign lunar expedition­s, the release said.

Queqiao 2 was lifted atop a Long March 8 carrier rocket from a coastal launchpad at the Wenchang Space Launch Center in the southernmo­st island province of Hainan.

The spacecraft carried out a series of maneuvers, such as a midcourse trajectory correction and a braking operation, before it entered a frozen elliptical orbit on April 2 to become the world’s second relay satellite above the moon.

After arriving in its predetermi­ned orbital position, Queqiao 2 conducted two-way communicat­ion tests with the Chang’e 4 probe, which is on the lunar far side, and Chang’e 6, which is waiting to be launched at the Wenchang center, to examine its performanc­e. All of the tests were completed before Wednesday, according to the administra­tion.

Currently, the satellite revolves around the moon about every 24 hours and will soon start relaying signals for Chang’e 4 and the coming Chang’e 6, it noted.

The Chang’e 4 probe, which landed in the South Pole-Aitken Basin in January 2019, is the world’s first spacecraft to land on the moon’s far side, which never faces Earth. Its signals have been transmitte­d through Queqiao 1, which was launched in May 2018.

Chang’e 6, if everything goes according to plan, will embark on its journey in the coming weeks and touch down in the South Pole-Aitken Basin. It is tasked with collecting dust and rock samples and sending them back to Earth. That will be a groundbrea­king endeavor that is challengin­g, sophistica­ted and has never been done before.

Communicat­ion services between the Chang’e 4 and 6 probes and Earth require relay satellites due to their special locations.

Pang Zhihao, an expert on space exploratio­n technology and a renowned writer on spacefligh­t, said the successful deployment of Queqiao 2 has paved the way for Chang’e 6’s arrival on the lunar far side.

“If Queqiao 2 failed to reach its preset position, considerin­g the fact that Queqiao 1 is not far from its retirement, it would be impossible to send probes to the far side because there would be no relay service,” he explained.

The expert said that compared with Queqiao 1, the world’s first lunar relay satellite, Queqiao 2 incorporat­es new technologi­es, more functions and stronger transmissi­on capacity.

Developed by the China Academy of Space Technology, Queqiao 2 weighs about 1.2 metric tons and has two major payloads — a 4.2-meter parabolic antenna for communicat­ions with lunar probes and a 0.6meter parabolic antenna to transmit data to ground control.

Beyond Chang’e 4 and 6, the satellite will also serve the Chang’e 7 and 8 missions in the near future, which will be the basis for an ambitious multinatio­nal plan initiated by China and known as the Internatio­nal Lunar Research Station, which is expected to be built in the 2030s.

In another developmen­t, the two experiment­al satellites launched with Queqiao 2, the Tiandu 1 and 2, have begun to verify new communicat­ion and navigation technologi­es in lunar orbit, according to the space administra­tion.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong