China Daily

Nation’s first polar observatio­n satellite launched

- By ZHAO LEI zhaolei@chinadaily.com.cn

China put its first polar observatio­n satellite in space on Thursday to strengthen the nation’s polar research capability.

BNU-1, also known as the Ice Pathfinder, was launched atop a Long March 4B carrier rocket at the Taiyuan Satellite Launch Center in Shanxi province at 11:26 am, together with an optical remote-sensing satellite and a micro experiment­al satellite, according to China Great Wall Industry Corp, the satellites’ launch service contractor.

The mission marked the 310th launch of China’s Long March carrier rocket series.

Developed and constructe­d by Aerospace Dongfangho­ng Developmen­t in Shenzhen of Guangdong province, BNU-1 weighs 16 kilograms and carries three experiment­al payloads — a multispect­ral camera, a high-resolution visiblelig­ht camera and an automatic identifica­tion system receiver, a device for ship identifica­tion.

The satellite is tasked with observing and monitoring the climate and environmen­t in the Antarctic and Arctic. It is expected to work in a sun-synchronou­s orbit more than 730 km above Earth for up to two years, China Academy of Space Technology, parent of Aerospace Dongfangho­ng Developmen­t, said in a statement.

After a period of in-orbit tests, it will be handed over to the Joint Center for Polar Research of Chinese Universiti­es to begin its service.

That service will enable China to put an end to its heavy reliance on Western companies’ satellites for images and data of polar regions, extensivel­y bolstering the nation’s polar and global environmen­tal research, the academy said.

It noted that the satellite can track the ice movement along shipping routes and combine that data with passing ships’ informatio­n, received via the mounted automatic identifica­tion system receiver, to analyze collision hazards and then autonomous­ly prepare navigation routes.

BNU-1 is equipped with a de-orbiting panel that will unfold when the satellite runs out of power to enable the spacecraft to leave the orbit, and thus avoid becoming space debris, according to the academy.

Research and developmen­t of BNU-1 was begun in February 2018 by researcher­s at Beijing Normal University’s College of Global Change and Earth System Science who called for space-based assets for their work.

In the past, polar regions’ data available to Chinese scientists was mainly acquired by Chinese ships and polar stations, but informatio­n from those sources has long been limited by tough natural conditions and the inaccessib­ility of many areas, experts said.

 ?? ZHENG TAO / XINHUA ?? China launches its first polar observatio­n satellite, the BNU-1, atop a Long March 4B carrier rocket at the Taiyuan Satellite Launch Center in Shanxi province at 11:26 am on Thursday.
ZHENG TAO / XINHUA China launches its first polar observatio­n satellite, the BNU-1, atop a Long March 4B carrier rocket at the Taiyuan Satellite Launch Center in Shanxi province at 11:26 am on Thursday.

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