China's Space Program News Thread

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JayBird

Junior Member
".....China has been working hard on an
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, although the last attempt at reaching Mars was in 2011 and on that occasion the probe failed to even leave Earth’s orbit."

The above seemed like almost a tagline when these certain media talked about China Mars missions. And they never failed to purposely not mention that it was a Russian carrier rocket that put it into the wrong earth orbit.

Actually I would've been very surprised if they didn't use the opportunity to slander China some more with the current agenda of the media. I mean how often do you guys read anything regarding China or Chinese people for that matter in a postive light?

The impression I got out of the media reporting is that China is a imperialistic country and a threat to world peace with despicable, selfish, dirty, immoral and uncivilized people which is far from the truth. :rolleyes:
 

davidau

Senior Member
Registered Member
Totally in agreement with JayBird. Furthermore, the West seems to think they are the only ones that have the inventiveness etc., forgetting China has over 5000 years of collective wisdom, inventiveness and virtue. Remember China invented gunpowder, compass, paper, water clock centuries ago. The Chinese, however, had not use these to invade, colonise, interfere, belittle other countries. Now China a is strong country, both economically and militarily, the West simplify cannot stand it. Instead of co-operating to have a win-win situation and have a harmonised and peaceful world, the west, unfortunately, try to destroy, damage, falsify and interfere with China's achievements. You might ask yourself, who threatens the world peace?
 

escobar

Brigadier
China second only to the U.S. in terms of number of satellites:
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China currently has over 140 satellites in orbit with stable operation, second only to the U.S. in terms of satellite ownership, said a Chinese engineer from the national defense field at a satellite exhibition.

Satellites have been used in socioeconomic development, resource protection, disaster prevention and relief and for the nurturing of emerging industries, according to Tian Yulong, chief engineer of the China National Space Administration.

Tian mentioned that civilian remote sensing satellites have distributed more than 10 million views of remote sensing data and that the number of users of live satellite TV has exceeded 30 million. Furthermore, the Beidou regional navigation system has covered many industries and over 10 provinces and cities in China.
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Although China has many satellites in orbit, the satellites’ on-the-ground application system is in urgent need of development, said Hou Qingguo, Vice President and Secretary General of China Users Association for Satellite Communications, Broadcasting and Television and the Electronics and Information Industry...
 

escobar

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Space Star Orders Gilat SkyEdge 2-c Tech for China’s First Ka-HTS Satellite:
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Gilat Satellite Networks is entering into a partnership with China’s Space Star Technology Co (SSTC), a subsidiary of China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation (CASC), in which SSTC and Gilat will jointly provide the satellite communications network for ChinaSat 16, the first Ka-band multi-spot-beam High Throughput Satellite (HTS) in China.

Multiple network segments and VSAT terminals will use Gilat’s SkyEdge 2-c technology, per the agreement. The SkyEdge 2-c network is expected to bring high speed fixed and mobile services, including airborne, maritime, train and land mobility throughout the country. Gilat will also share its knowledge of satellite-enabled applications with SSTC.
 

escobar

Brigadier
China's dark matter particle explorer satellite, the first of its series, will be transported from Shanghai to the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center. The satellite, made by the Chinese Academy of Sciences, and its carrier rocket have been packaged and loaded onto a special train bound for the launch site. They are expected to arrive at Jiuquan in four days.

The satellite and its solar panels were separately packaged into two containers. An extra container has a protective system that maintains the temperature at 20 degrees Celsius and the humidity level at 35 to 50 percent.

The containers are tightly sealed as the devices inside require high levels of cleanliness. During the journey to the launch center, the devices are being monitored and controlled by personnel on a separate carriage to ensure that they stay in a safe environment.

The dark matter particle explorer, which will be launched at the end of the year, has the widest observation spectrum and highest energy resolution of any dark-matter probe in the world. It will observe the direction, energy and electric charge of high-energy particles in space in search of dark matter, according to the chief scientist of the project.
 

escobar

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Chinese Long March 3B launches first Communications Satellite for Laos:
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China’s heavy-lift Long March 3B lifted off from the Xichang Satellite Launch Center on Friday, carrying a communications satellite to orbit for the small Asian country of Laos. Friday’s launch occurred at 16:07 UTC and marked the third CZ-3B mission over a five-week period as China keeps up the high launch rate expected for the closing months of 2015.

LaoSat-1 is the country’s first Geostationary Satellite, to be operated by the Laos National Authority for Science and Technology to provide television and data services using a C/Ku-Band payload. The satellite and its launch were contracted through the China Great Wall Industry Corporation that offers Chinese space systems including satellites and launch vehicles on the international market.

Based on the DFH-3B satellite platform, LAOSat-1 weighs in at approximately four metric tons with a bus size of 2.2 by 2.0 by 3.1 meters, capable of hosting payloads in the 500kg range. Spanning 18 meters with its solar arrays deployed, the satellite will take up station at 128.5 degrees East in Geostationary Orbit to provide coverage of southeastern Asia. The satellite is outfitted with 14 C-Band and 8 Ku-Band transponders to deliver television and data services.

The LAOSat-1 satellite will complete an expedited commissioning campaign in Geostationary Orbit to be ready for operation on December 2 to broadcast the 40th Independence Anniversary festivities in Laos. Originally, the launch of LAOSat-1 was announced for Saturday through the usual navigational warnings. On rather short notice, new warnings were published on Thursday indicating that the launch was moved up by 24 hours – a capability demonstrated by the Chinese earlier this year to avoid bad weather getting in the way of a launch...
 

escobar

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China Getting in on SmallSat Buzz:
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China has entered the realm of small satellite players with the success of its first CubeSat launch this September. The mission, directed by Shufan Wu, senior aerospace engineer at the Shanghai Engineering Center for Microsatellites (SECM), orbited three small satellites capable of flight tracking and ship tracking from space.

Wu spearheaded China’s maiden CubeSat mission through SECM, with hopes of seeing many more in the future. He told Via Satellite that, over the past few years, micro/nano satellites below 50Kg — referred to in China as minosatellites — have become very attractive for commercial applications.

“My ambition here is to explore this minosatellite technology and the applications as well. We are focused on technology experiments and exploring potential applications and the commercial use of minosatellites,” he said.

SECM has existed since 2003, and has built seven satellites total, including the three CubeSats orbited earlier this year. The company also manufactured a 1.7-ton satellite for dark energy detection slated to launch by year’s end. Wu has honed his skills designing small satellites in Europe. After working at the Nanjing University of Aerospace and Astronautics, he lived in Germany and the Netherlands, working for two years at Surrey Satellite Technology Limited (SSTL), and then for the European Space Agency (ESA) for more than a decade. In June 2013 Wu returned to China and joined SECM, where he was tasked with setting up a new department and recruiting a team of young engineers to work on CubeSats and microsatellites.

“In China, CubeSats are just starting,” Wu explained. “This is the first bunch of CubeSats launched in China, but we are targeting toward the world-frontier technology. The mission used a lot of top-level technology and components from Europe thanks to my long time experience and strong links in Europe.”

Wu emphasized working with international partners to accelerate China’s prowess in the field of small satellites. SECM leveraged launch opportunities in China and teamed with European partners on designing the spacecraft. Wu said the propulsion systems came from Sweden, and GomSpace helped produce the payloads.

“We want to use this small mission to jump into the frontier of the CubeSat community, because if we start building this bridge by ourselves, step by step, then it will take a long time and when you are there, the community has already moved far ahead. So for this project I brought a lot of international partners to try to use available latest technology and techniques,” said Wu.

The first triple-CubeSat mission is testing inter-satellite links and micro-propulsion systems. They are also trialing Automatic Dependent Surveillance-Broadcast (ADS-B) and Automatic Identification System (AIS) payloads for aircraft and boat tracking, respectively. Wu said this first mission is not customer-oriented, and is mainly for technology demonstration, but future missions will look at commercial applications.

“I believe there is a huge business opportunity for the CubeSats in the world and in China as well. Just this year you heard a lot of stories about satellites from Elon Musk to provide Wi-Fi, but Wi-Fi is just one point. In space there are so many sectors you can explore,” said Wu.

SECM’s first CubeSat mission was designated as STU 2. This mission shifted ahead of the intended first mission, STU 1, which was scheduled to launch as part of the QB50 mission. However, QB50 fell behind when its intended launch vehicle, the Brazil-Ukraine Cyclone 4 rocket program stalled. SECM contributed one satellite for QB50, which is pursuing another launch opportunity in 2016. Beyond this, Wu said SECM has other customers lined up with CubeSat projects.

“We have a customer from China to run some open-source software tests on a CubeSat. That’s another CubeSat we plan to do in the next year — a 3U CubeSat — and to demonstrate components from a cellphone, to demonstrate that the [Central Processing Unit] CPU on a cellphone can actually perform more tasks than the current CPU onboard satellites,” said Wu. “Another CubeSat we have in mind is for Asia-Pacific Space Corporation Organization (APSCO). They have a student small satellite program, mainly for education and training. We are expecting to build one CubeSat for this program.”

Wu said there are many opportunities to launch minosatellites in China because of the frequencies of launches. He mentioned rideshares on larger missions along with dedicated small launchers to Low Earth Orbit (LEO) such as the Kuaizhou 1 (also named FT-1), the Long March 11, and the Long March 6. On the ground, SECM is also pioneering a new method using Ultra-High Frequency (UHF) amateur band, and S-band Wi-Fi frequency, which is open to the public in lieu of China’s national network.

“We are trying to explore an approach that we don’t need special permission from the government to operate a satellite. We just use the publically available resources and frequency bands. This is something new in China. I can say that it is the first ever, or one of the earliest, trials for this sector,” he said.

Wu highlighted the potential of SmallSats, or minosatellites, to conduct missions that would not be economically viable with larger spacecraft. SECM intends to seek out ways to commercialize SmallSats for both China and the world. Wu said because satellite manufacturing is SECM’s primary business, fabricating SmallSats will generate revenue first. Beyond this, he said SECM would evaluate providing services.

“We want to use CubeSats to show that, though it is very small, it is not a toy. It can be used for some applications — not all — but at least on some level it can perform what the big satellite doesn’t want to do or cannot do,” he said.

SECM customers include the government, commercial, and the science community. Wu said the company can mass produce minosatellites if there is the demand. He added that SECM plans to explore more types of payloads, and in two years possibly launch its second and third batches of CubeSats. Beyond this, he also mentioned that the low cost of CubeSats means startups are showing interest, potentially driving NewSpace into China.

“The Chinese government is encouraging people to innovate and be entrepreneurs,” said Wu. “Also the government is opening the space sector for private investment. I’m starting to see private space companies are emerging quickly in China, and I would say in the next few years, there will be more; not only state-owned entrepreneurs, but also small private companies for satellites and launchers. They are emerging. I already know a few.”
 

escobar

Brigadier
Laosat-1 comsat launched...
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