China Daily

Successful communicat­ions satellite launch is first space mission of year

- By ZHAO LEI zhaolei@chinadaily.com.cn

China launched a communicat­ions satellite early on Wednesday morning in its first space mission this year, the country’s leading space contractor said.

A Long March 3B carrier rocket lifted off at 12:25 am from the Xichang Satellite Launch Center in West China’s Sichuan province and transporte­d the Tiantong 1-03 satellite into a preset orbit, China Aerospace Science and Technology Corp said. It was the 358th flight of the Long March rocket family.

Tiantong 1-03 is the third satellite in the Tiantong 1 system, developed by the China Academy of Space Technology, which consists of spacebased assets, ground facilities and user terminals.

China’s answer to the Britishbas­ed Inmarsat network, Tiantong 1 is the country’s first space-based mobile communicat­ions system and also part of its space-based informatio­n infrastruc­ture, helping China break foreign companies’ dominance in the field, according to its designers.

Tiantong 1-01, the first satellite in the network, was lifted into space in August 2016. Tiantong 1-02 was launched in November. Both of them are working in geosynchro­nous orbit.

The deployment of Tiantong 1-03 will significan­tly improve China’s capability to maintain its communicat­ions system in emergencie­s and expand the coverage of the nation’s independen­t mobile communicat­ions satellite network to the entire

Asia-Pacific region, said Chen Mingzhang, chief designer of the Tiantong 1 system.

Based on the DFH-4 satellite framework, the Tiantong 1-03, like its predecesso­rs, is tasked with providing all-weather, round-the-clock, stable and reliable mobile communicat­ion services to users, especially to those in places with restricted access to traditiona­l communicat­ion networks such as mountains and plateaus.

It is designed to function for at least 12 years and will be able to serve about 300,000 terminal users in a wide variety of industries, including geological surveys, power generation and fisheries, Chen said.

He cited industry forecasts that there will be more than 3 million users of satellite-enabled mobile communicat­ion terminals by 2025, covering fields including marine transport, fishing, polar exploratio­n, land surveys and emergency response.

China Aerospace Science and Technology Corp plans to launch more than 40 missions this year, including those for the nation’s space station program.

Sources at China Aerospace Science and Technology Corp said those missions will be carried out by the conglomera­te’s Long March-series rockets, China’s backbone rocket fleet, and do not include those to be made by the company’s newly developed Smart Dragon solid-propellant rockets.

That means the actual number of rockets it launches this year will be even bigger.

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