The Star Malaysia

Feeling superb

Satellites to conduct surveillan­ce over South China Sea

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Atletico Madrid players celebratin­g after winning the UEFA Super Cup final against Real Madrid at the Lillekula Stadium in Tallinn, Estonia, on Wednesday.

BEIJING: The southernmo­st island province of Hainan is preparing a satellite network that is expected to enable China to conduct effective and efficient surveillan­ce over the South China Sea.

Design work for the Hainan Earth- Observatio­n Satellite Constellat­ion, a project headed by the Sanya Institute of Remote Sensing in Hainan and sponsored by the provincial government, has begun at the institute and by its contractor­s.

The first in the constellat­ion, a Hainan 1 optical satellite, is scheduled to be launched in the second half of 2019, according to a statement from the institute.

The statement said the constellat­ion will have 10 satellites that will be launched in four stages by the end of 2021.

First, three Hainan 1 optical satellites are scheduled to enter orbit in 2019. The following year, three Hainan 1 satellites and two Sanya 1 multispect­ral remote-sensing satellites will be launched. In 2021, two Sansha 1 synthetic aperture radar satellites are expected to be sent into space.

At a meeting in Sanya on Tuesday, Chinese space experts reviewed and approved technical plans for the first four Hainan 1 satellites.

According to the institute, each Hainan 1 will weigh 50kg, and will operate in a low-Earth orbit 500 kmkil above Earth and move at 7.9km per second.

Yang Tianliang, director of the institute and chief designer of the constellat­ion, said in a phone interview that Hainan 1 satellites will carry cameras and identifica­tion technology.

“The combinatio­n of cameras and automatic identifica­tion systems will allow us not only to monitor ships lawfully sailing in the South China Sea, but also to detect and track illegally operating ones,” Yang said.

Automatic identifica­tion systems can receive and process signals concerning positionin­g data, courses of vessels as well as speed readings sent by a moving ship. The technology is often mounted on ships and satellites and assists vessel operators in understand­ing maritime traffic situations while also helping maritime authoritie­s to track and monitor vessel movements.

Yang said Hainan administer­s hundreds of islands and reefs in the South China Sea, so it requires the assistance of a space-based platform to monitor these territorie­s and surroundin­g waters.

He also noted that once the satellite network becomes fully operationa­l by 2021, it will be able to cover the entire South China Sea and will be very helpful in a wide range of sectors, such as marine transporta­tion, fisheries, island management and maritime search and rescue.

Gao Enyu, a manager from Hainan MinoSpace Technology Co, was quoted by China News Service as saying on Tuesday that researcher­s optimized Hainan 1’s cameras to make them suitable for monitoring large expanses of waters.

He added that the satellite is capable of detecting and identifyin­g all midsize and large vessels.

Gao’s company is in charge of the research and developmen­t of some of Hainan 1’s equipment. — China Daily/Asia News Network

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 ?? — AFP ?? Liftoff: A Long March-4C rocket taking off from the Xichang launch centre carrying the Queqiao (‘Magpie Bridge’) satellite.
— AFP Liftoff: A Long March-4C rocket taking off from the Xichang launch centre carrying the Queqiao (‘Magpie Bridge’) satellite.

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