Chinese project will bounce signals off asteroids to see how dangerous they are to Earth
Aleading Chinese university has begun constructing an array of more than 20 large radar antennas to track asteroids that have the potential to be hazardous to Earth.
The project, named China Fuyan (or “compound eye”), is led by the Beijing Institute of Technology. The array aims to bounce signals off asteroids within 93 million miles (150 million kilometres) of Earth (about as distant as the Sun) to image and track objects and determine the possibility that they could impact our planet.
So far, two antennas have been constructed at a site in Chongqing, in southern China. The pair is expected to be tested and become operational by September, according to the Chineselanguage outlet Science and Technology Daily, which first reported the development.
The finished system will include more than 20 radar antennas, each with a diameter of 82 to 98 feet (25 to 30 metres). Chinese news reports claim that the system will be the world’s farthest-reaching radar system, but few details about the project, such as the wavelengths at which it will operate are available.
Long Teng, president of the Beijing Institute of Technology, told Beijing news outlet Global Times that the project will meet the country’s requirements for near-Earth defense and space sensing capability, as well as frontier studies on the formation of asteroids.
The system could also have applicability for tracking satellites and debris in Earth orbit.
In April, the China National Space Administration announced that it is working on a planetary defense plan that includes tracking near-Earth objects and launching an asteroid-deflection test mission in the next few years.
The new decadal survey by the US National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine found that ground-based radar could be one of humanity’s best tools for protecting Earth against asteroids.