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China makes breakthrough in R&D of heavy-lift launch rocket

2017-03-04 17:01

CGTN Editor: Li Yan

China has officially started early explorations in the research and development of a heavy-lift launch vehicle‍. An important breakthrough has now been made in technical challenges of the rocket engine.

Research and development of the two kinds of high thrust engines is smoothly progressing, said Tan Yonghua, director of the Science and Technology Department, No.6 Research Institute of China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation.

Wu Yanhua, the deputy director of China National Space Administration, said China's heavy-lift launch vehicle will be named Long March 9, and its first flight is planned for around 2030.

Qin Xudong, director of the overall design department, No.1 Research Institute of China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation, said the main research project is known as "One Overall Three Big."

"One Overall" relates to the optimization of the overall system, "Three Big" refers to the design, manufacturing and testing of big-caliber rockets; 480 tons of high-thrust (big power) liquid oxygen and kerosene engines and 220 tons of high-thrust (big power) hydrogen and oxygen engine.

Compared to the five-meter diameter rocket Long March 5, heavy-lift launch vehicle Long March 9 is much more difficult to develop. It needs higher requirements, Qin Xudong indicated.

Tan Yonghua stated that the thrust of Long March 9 is designed to be greater than 3,000 tons, its carrying capacity at near-Earth orbit is more than 100 tons and its transferring capacity from the Earth to the Moon is greater than 50 tons, which meets the needs of a future manned lunar landing, Mars exploration and farther deep space exploration.

It is reported that world space powers have all restarted research and development of heavy-lift launch vehicles.

If Long March 9 can accomplish its first flight, the heavy-lift launch vehicle would likely become the world's largest carrying rocket.

http://www.ecns.cn/2017/03-04/247918.shtml

Thinking Big: China Hopes to Conduct 2nd Mission to Mars by 2030

By Staff Writers

Beijing (Sputnik) Mar 03, 2017

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China is likely to conduct its second Mars mission, aimed at collecting soil samples for analysis, by 2030, according to the China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation (CASC).

CASC consultant Ye Peijian said China hoped to collect samples of Mars' soil and bring them back to Earth to conduct scientific analyses of the red planet's structure and environment as well as to measure the possibilities for construction on Mars by 2030, the Xinhua news agency said on Wednesday.

Ye added that such missions were likely to open possibilities for China's deep space exploration.

On December 27, the Chinese State Council Information Office (SCIO) said China was planning to conduct its first orbiting and roving exploration of Mars by 2020. A month later, China National Space Administration's (CNSA) Vice Director Wu Yanhua confirmed that China's space exploration agenda included two missions to Mars and one to Jupiter.

http://www.spacedaily.com/reports/T..._Conduct_2nd_Mission_to_Mars_by_2030_999.html

China's 1st cargo spacecraft to make three rendezvous with Tiangong-2

Source: Xinhua

2017-03-04

BEIJING, March 4 (Xinhua) -- China's first cargo spacecraft Tianzhou-1 is expected to dock with the orbiting Tiangong-2 space lab three times after its planned launch in April, sources said Saturday.

Tianzhou-1 will be sent into space from the Wenchang Space Launch Center in south China's Hainan Province aboard a Long March-7 Y2 carrier rocket, according to a spokesperson of China's manned space program.

It is scheduled to refuel Tiangong-2 three times and carry out experiments and tests.

During the journey, Tianzhou-1 will orbit on its own for about three months and together with Tiangong-2 for about two months after their rendezvous.

At the end of the mission, Tianzhou-1 will leave the orbit and fall back to earth while Tiangong-2 will remain in orbit and continue its experiments.

The Tianzhou-1 mission will complete the second phase of the country's manned space program.

It will be crucial for China in achieving the final step of establishing a space station around 2022.

http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2017-03/04/c_136101226.htm

China to launch space station core module in 2018

By Staff Writers

Beijing (XNA) Mar 03, 2017

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With the ISS set to retire in 2024, the Chinese space station will offer a promising alternative, and China will be the only country with a permanent space station.


China will launch a space station core module in 2018 as the first step in completing the country's first space outpost, according to a senior engineer with China Aerospace Science and Technology Corp. (CASC) on Thursday.

The core module of the space station, named "Tianhe-1" according to previous reports, will be launched on board a new-generation Long March-5 heavyweight carrier rocket, said Bao Weimin, director with CASC and a member of the National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC).

It will be followed by a series of launches for other components of the space station, including two space labs, which will dock with the core module while in space, in the next four years or so, he said, adding that the space station will be completed around 2022.

Assembly of the core module has already been completed and tests are currently under way, said Bao, who is in Beijing for the annual session of China's top political advisory body.

Earlier reports said the new Chinese space station will initially be much smaller than the current International Space Station (ISS), which weighs 420 tonnes, but could be expanded for future scientific research and international cooperation.

With the ISS set to retire in 2024, the Chinese space station will offer a promising alternative, and China will be the only country with a permanent space station.

Bao said the Chinese outpost will function in orbit for "dozens of years," and that it had been specially designed to be able to handle space debris.

"For the big pieces (of space debris), we could conduct evasive maneuvers, and for those measuring less than 10 cm in size, we just take the hit," Bao said, adding that all key parts of the space station will be serviceable and replaceable.

He went on to say that the next five years will see some exciting advances in China's space program.

In particular, the Long March-5 launch missions have been scheduled this year, including one that will take the Chang'e-5 lunar probe to the Moon in November and return with lunar samples.

Long March-5 is a large, two-stage rocket with a payload capacity of 25 tonnes to low-Earth orbit and 14 tonnes to geostationary transfer orbit, the largest of China's carrier rockets. Its carrying capacity is about 2.5 times that of the current main model Long March carrier rockets.

The rocket will also be used in China's planned Mars probes, and possibly future missions to Jupiter and other planets within the solar system, Bao said.

Source: Xinhua News Agency

http://www.spacedaily.com/reports/China_to_launch_space_station_core_module_in_2018_999.html

China Focus: Riding an asteroid: China's next space goal

2017-03-02 07:20:35

By Xinhua writer Yu Fei

BEIJING, March 2 (Xinhua) -- After sending a probe to Mars in 2020, China plans to explore three asteroids and land on one of them to conduct scientific research, according to a Chinese asteroid research expert.

The "China's Space Activities in 2016" white paper, issued by the Information Office of the State Council recently, also mentioned asteroid exploration in outlining the major tasks of the country's space industry in the next five years.

Ji Jianghui, a researcher at the Purple Mountain Observatory of the Chinese Academy of Sciences and a member of the expert committee for scientific goal argumentation of deep space exploration in China, took part in expert discussions on the main scientific goals of China's deep space exploration in the next two decades.

The committee basically decided to conduct expeditions to asteroids and then Jupiter and its moon system after the Mars expedition.

"The experts' plan is to fly a probe by an asteroid, to fly side by side with an asteroid for a period, and to land on a third one to conduct in situ sampling analysis on the surface," said Ji.

So far, only the United States and Japan had landed probes on asteroids. Japanese probe Hayabusa 1 landed on the asteroid Itokawa, and brought samples back to Earth.

"China will send the Chang'e-5 lunar probe to the moon and bring samples back in 2017. If that mission succeeds, it would mean China, like Japan, would be able to bring back samples from asteroids to study in labs on Earth in the future," said Ji.

Scientists would give priority to detecting near-Earth asteroids to analyze their probability of colliding with Earth.

At the same time, they are eager to study the formation and evolution of asteroids, which might shed light on the origins of the solar system, as well as the origins of life and water on Earth.

Chinese scientists plan to fly a probe side by side with an asteroid called Apophis for a period to conduct close observation, and land on the asteroid 1996 FG3. The probe is also expected to conduct a fly-by of an asteroid to be selected according to the launch time. The whole mission would last around six years, said Ji.

THREATS FROM SPACE

Discovered in 2004, Apophis is about the size of two football fields, with its longest diameter at about 394 meters. Analysis shows it will come very close to Earth in 2029, missing our planet by some 30,000 kilometers. The distance, a hair's breadth in astronomical terms, is within the orbit of the moon, and even closer than some man-made satellites. It will be the closest asteroid of its size in recorded history. The asteroid is supposed to come around Earth again in 2036.

Apophis was believed to pose a big threat to Earth when it was first discovered. More than 100 scientific groups around the globe are studying it. Further study has shown it has only a 1-in-a-million chance of hitting the Earth in 2029.

Although we don't have to worry about Apophis for the time being, scientists estimate there are about 300,000 near-Earth objects with a diameter over 40 meters, and only 3 percent of them have been discovered. An international asteroid warning network was set up in December 2013 to monitor potential threats.

As a member of the warning network, China's Purple Mountain Observatory, discovered three new near-Earth asteroids -- 2017 BK3, 2017 BM3 and 2017 BL3 -- in January this year, and 2017 BL3 poses a potential threat to Earth, said Ji.

"In order to cope with the potential threat of the near-Earth objects, we need not only ground-based telescopes to form a monitoring and warning system, but also space probes to conduct close investigations of the asteroids to study their physical characteristics, interior structure and content," Ji said.

China's asteroid exploration will help scientists better understand the basic features of the near-Earth objects, and seek effective measures to deal with the possibility of a collision, said Ji.

ORIGINS OF LIFE?

Some scientists believe asteroid 1996 FG3 might hide the secret of the origins of life on Earth.

At present, there are two main theories about the origins of life. One is that life was conceived on Earth itself, and the other is that life originated in outer space. Scientists have discovered many meteorites containing organic compounds, which are believed to be related to the origins of life.

Many asteroids also contain water. And some scientists believe the water on Earth might have been brought by asteroids or comets.

"Scientists have conducted many ground-based astronomical observations on asteroid 1996 FG3. Spectral analysis shows that it is a carbonaceous asteroid, and it's very likely that it contains organic components which are needed for the origins of life," Ji said.

China has already conducted a fly-by observation of an asteroid named Toutatis.

On Dec. 13, 2012, China's second lunar probe, Chang'e-2, after successfully completing its mission, rendezvoused with Toutatis at a distance of 770 meters, as the space rock, bigger than a city block, swept by Earth at a distance of around 7 million kilometers.

It was the world's first close fly-by observation of Toutatis. The probe took high-resolution images providing a number of discoveries.

Ji and his collaborators conducted intensive research, finding the ginger-root-shaped asteroid is about 4,750 meters long and 1,950 meters wide. They studied how it rotated in space.

The research also revealed new insights into the geological features and formation of the asteroid, showing it was essentially rubble and that the impact craters on its surface could be 1.6 billion years old.

http://english.sina.com/news/2017-03-02/detail-ifyazwha3562033.shtml

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China Moon Exploration: Chang’e-5 Lunar Probe Detailed
 
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Civil users of BeiDou navigation system exceed 10 million
(People's Daily Online) March 03, 2017

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According to Fu Yong, head of China National Administration of GNSS and Applications, the BeiDou system has been working well since it was put into operation, and its civil user base now exceeds 10 million. In addition, BeiDou has finalized an inspection of 18,000 kilometers of gas pipe in Beijing, as Beijing Gas Group plans to replace its former GPS system with the BeiDou system.

Data shows that the overall function of the system meets design requirements. Key indices such as accuracy of positioning and timing services are better than design criteria demand.

The BeiDou system was independently established and is now independently operated by China. It provides positioning, navigation and timing services with high accuracy for users around the world. The first BeiDou satellite was launched in 2000 as a Chinese alternative to satellite navigation systems developed by other countries. In December 2012, it began providing positioning, navigation, timing and short message services to China and some parts of the Asia Pacific.
 
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China to launch 6-8 latest navigation satellites in 2017
Source: Xinhua 2017-03-06 21:57:35

BEIJING, March 6 (Xinhua) -- China plans to launch six to eight BeiDou-3 satellites in 2017, according to a senior designer of the satellite navigation system.

It is part of a plan to put 35 BeiDou satellites into space to form an orbiting satellite network and offer worldwide navigation services by 2020, said Yang Yuanxi, deputy chief designer of the BeiDou satellite navigation system, on Monday.

Yang was speaking on the sidelines of the fifth session of the 12th Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC) National Committee, of which he is a member.

Compared to earlier generation products, the BeiDou-3 is able to cover a wider range and has a longer lifespan of 12 years, according to Bao Weimin, another CPPCC National Committee member and an official with China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation.

Named after the Chines name for the Big Dipper constellation, the BeiDou system is designed to offer an alternative to GPS.

A government white paper published in December said China expects to provide basic services to limited clients in 2018 and expand to all clients with more accurate and reliable services through better ground- and satellite-based systems by 2020.

China has already sent 22 BeiDou satellites into space.

Yang said the launches this year will feature two satellites on a single carrier rocket.
 
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Probe will bring back moon rocks and soil
By Zhao Lei | China Daily | Updated: 2017-03-03 07:35

Chang'e 5, China's newest lunar probe, will bring 2 kilograms of lunar soil and rock samples back to Earth before the end of 2017, the project's chief said Thursday.

"The month long Chang'e 5 mission will be the most sophisticated lunar expedition China has ever made," Hu Hao, director of the national Lunar Exploration Center, told China Daily. "It will face a lot of challenges such as the great number of demanding maneuvers and the complicated condition of its landing site."

The center is under the State Administration of Science, Technology and Industry for National Defense.

Hu said that Chang'e 5 will be launched atop a Long March 5 heavy-lift carrier rocket at the Wenchang Space Launch Center in Hainan province.

The 8.2-metric ton probe has four components, an orbiter, lander, ascender and re-entry module. After the probe reaches lunar orbit, the components will separate into two parts, with the orbiter and re-entry module remaining in the orbit while the lander and ascender descend toward the moon's surface, Hu said.

The lander and ascender will make a soft landing - using small rockets to slow descent - and get to work of such tasks as using a drill to collect underground rocks and a mechanical arm to gather lunar soil.

After two days, the ascender's rocket will elevate it to lunar orbit to dock with the re-entry module. It will transfer lunar samples to the module, which will carry them to Earth. The samples are to be distributed to scientists around the country for research.

If the mission is successful, the third phase of China's lunar exploration program will be finished ahead of schedule, Hu said, also a deputy to the 12th National People's Congress. The third phase is to be concluded before 2020, according to earlier plans.

China's most recent lunar mission took place in December 2013 when the Chang'e 3 probe carried the nation's first lunar rover, Yutu or Jade Rabbit, to the moon. The mission marked the mankind's first soft-landing on the moon in nearly four decades.

Chang'e 3's success marked the completion of the second phase of China's lunar exploration program. It followed the successful Chang'e 1 mission in 2007 and Chang'e 2 in 2010.

Designers and engineers are now carrying out tests on Chang'e 5 and work is proceeding well, Hu said.

The Chang'e 5 mission will pave the way for the nation's future manned expedition to the moon, Hu said.

Ye Peijian, one of China's leading space scientists, told Xinhua News Agency on Wednesday that the fourth phase of the country's lunar exploration program will unfold in 2018 as the Chang'e 4 probe will be launched to carry out the world's first soft-landing on the far side of the moon. He added that China also plans to explore the two lunar poles in the near future.


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China to develop satellite-delivery rockets released from airplanes
By Zhao Lei(China Daily)
Updated: 2017-03-07 07:56:56

China will develop a new generation of rockets launched from aircraft that can put satellites into space, according to Li Tongyu, the head of carrier rocket development at the China Academy of Launch Vehicle Technology.

Air-launched rockets can rapidly replace dysfunctional satellites or, in cases of disaster relief, quickly send up Earth observation satellites to assist in the effort, Li said.

Designers at the academy, which is the main developer of Chinese carrier rockets, have designed a model capable of sending a payload of about 100 kilograms into low Earth orbit and are ready to produce one if the government asks, he said. They plan to design a larger rocket that could carry 200 kg into orbit.

"The Y-20 strategic transport plane will be the carrier of these rockets. The jet will hold a rocket within its fuselage and release it at a certain altitude. The rocket will be ignited after it leaves the plane," Li said.

Large satellites will still have to be put into orbit with conventional rockets, experts said.

Delivery of the Y-20 to the Chinese Air Force began in July. It is China's first domestically developed heavy-lift transport plane and has a maximum takeoff weight of more than 200 metric tons and a maximum payload of about 66 tons, aviation experts said.

Solid-fuel rockets can be launched from planes much faster than land-based, liquid-fueled rockets, where preparation can take days, weeks or longer, in part because it takes so much time to pump in the fuel, experts said.

Each mission involving a solid-fuel rocket launched by a Y-20 would take only 12 hours of preparation to place a 200 kg satellite into a sun-synchronous orbit 700 km above Earth, according to estimates by Long Lehao, an academician of the Chinese Academy of Engineering, and other researchers at the China Academy of Launch Vehicle Technology. The estimates were in an article published in October in the Journal of Deep-Space Exploration.

Other advantages of such rockets are that they are flexible in deployment and use and do not need ground infrastructure, said Pang Zhihao, executive editor-in-chief of Space International magazine. They also are less susceptible to bad weather and launch costs are lower than those of ground-launched rockets, he added.

The United States undertook the world's first air-launched space mission in 1990, in which a Pegasus rocket developed by the former Orbital Sciences Corp was launched from a refitted B-52 strategic bomber to send two small satellites into orbit. Since then, 43 Pegasus missions have been carried out, with the most recent in December.

Several US space companies, including Virgin Galactic and Generation Orbit Launch Services, are developing air-launched rockets.

Chinese designers have been quietly working on the concept for years. China Aerospace Science and Technology Corp, parent of Li's academy, displayed a scale model of a winged, solid-propellant, air-launched rocket in 2006 at the Sixth China International Aviation and Aerospace Exhibition in Zhuhai, Guangdong province.
 
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China's new spaceship to rival the best in the world
(Chinadaily.com.cn) 14:37, March 08, 2017

China is making a new-generation manned spaceship which rivals that of world-leading space powers, a space mission expert said.

"Among the next generation of manned spaceships some foreign countries are developing, only the Orion spacecraft of the US can carry out a moon landing mission," Zhang Bainan, a spaceship engineer with China Aerospace Science and Technology Corp, told Science and Technology Dailyon Tuesday.

China is working on a new manned spaceship that can fly both in low earth orbit, as well as a moon landing mission, Zhang said. He added that the spacecraft is recoverable and has a larger capacity than the new-generation manned spaceship of foreign countries, which can carry six people in low earth orbit and three to four in a moon landing mission.

As a late-starter in manned space flight, China has made significant advances and its newest spacecraft is set to match the capabilities of other world leaders in space exploration, Zhang said.

Last year, the re-entry module of the new spacecraft was put to the test aboard a Long March-7 rocket.

China first launched a man into space in 2003, 42 years after the former Soviet Union carried out the maiden manned space flight.

The country is projected to build a space station in 2020 and make a manned moon landing in 2030.

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Chinese state media is reporting that the country’s space program has developed a craft capable of both landing on the moon and flying in low-Earth orbit.
The new spacecraft is claimed to be able to accommodate multiple astronauts, according to spaceship engineer Zhang Bainian, who Science and Technology Daily cited as comparing the forthcoming ship to the Orion craft currently in development by the European Space Agency and NASA.
All six crewed missions of China’s Shenzhou spacecraft, modeled after Russia’s Soyuz series, have carried three astronauts in its re-entry capsule.

A late-bloomer in crewed space flight, 2003 marked the first time Beijing launched a human into space. Since that time its program has seen swift progress, and is now considered one of the top-three worldwide. In late 2016, two Chinese astronauts spent a month inside a space station during the country’s most recent crewed mission.

It will take about five years to implement a fully-operational space station with a permanent crew, according to reports. The space station is thought to be a platform for future lunar-landing missions.

Last year Beijing surpassed Moscow’s 17 rocket launches with 22, equaling the US for the first time, according to Jonathan McDowell, a Harvard University-based astrophysicist.

Had a launchpad explosion not grounded Washington’s Space X's Falcon 9 rocket fleet in early September 2016, the US may have conducted additional launches. The explosion happened as the $195 million Amos-6 communications satellite was preparing to be launched from Cape Canaveral.

https://sputniknews.com/science/201703091051424590-china-develops-spacecraft-lunar-landing/
 
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China to use nuclear power in outer space exploration: China Atomic Energy Authority
(People's Daily Online) 04:53, March 10, 2017

China is testing and carrying out research and development of space nuclear power technology, in order to supply power for outer space exploration, Vice Chairman of the China Atomic Energy Authority Wang Yiren said on Thursday.

The nuclear power is expected to become desirable for use in parts of space projects like the Jupiter or the Mars, where solar power is not a viable power source, according to Wang.
 
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【长征九号】3月6日,谭永华透露:在航天六院科研专家们的努力下,长征九号运载火箭的研制已经取得了突破性进展。目前已进行了70%左右的组件试验,用行话说,发生器和涡轮泵联试取得了圆满的成功,为后续工程的研制奠定了坚实的基础。个人估计在2028年左右可以上天。:coffee::D

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哈尔滨工业大学:空间立体动态高速激光通信网络技术。 研制了国内外首套空间光网络地面动态测试系统,可建立覆盖全球的空间光网络,实现天基信息网、互联网、移动通信网全面融合。还可为我军联合作战等提供广域移动通信保障,大大增强我军作战能力。:coffee::enjoy:

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BeiDou navigates its way to global stage
By Ma Si | China Daily | Updated: 2017-03-13


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The model of BeiDou Navigation Satellite System at an expo in Shenzhen, Guangdong province, Nov 1, 2016. [Photo/VCG]

China's location detection tech seeks to hit big time in Belt & Road regions

A recurring theme in the annual Government Work Report, the latest edition of which Premier Li Keqiang presented to the National People's Congress on March 5, has been promotion of high-end manufacturing and the Belt and Road Initiative, and helping Chinese companies to globalize their equipment and homegrown technologies. The BeiDou Navigation Satellite System is a perfect example of that spirit.

The GPS-like navigation system, a product of the Chinese National Space Administration, and managed by the China Satellite Navigation Office, is to accelerate its expansion into economies along the Belt and Road Initiative as China plans to launch six to eight BeiDou satellites this year. BeiDou has made significant progress in terms of accuracy of location detection.

The go-global strategy is part of China's broad plan to build a BeiDou navigation system with a constellation of 35 satellites by 2020. In comparison, GPS consists of 24 satellites.

"The globalization era for BeiDou is coming," said Miao Qianjun, secretary-general of the Global Navigation Satellite System and Location-based Services Association of China. The GLAC was founded in 1995 to promote the commercial application of BeiDou technologies.

"China is supporting BeiDou's exports roughly the same way it supports exports of high-speed railway products and technologies. BeiDou will become another high-tech name card for China," Miao said.

In February, the GLAC invited its enterprise members involved in BeiDou-related industries for discussions. With help from the National Development and Reform Commission, China's top economic planner, it set up an alliance for enterprises that seek to take BeiDou products and solutions to markets along the Belt and Road Initiative.

"We've received affirmative responses from 27 enterprises within a week. They are all eager to be part of our efforts," Miao said, adding the alliance members will receive financial support from the government.

Policy support for navigation technologies was first articulated in a guidance released by the NDRC in November 2016. It called for more help for enterprises to enable them to apply BeiDou technologies in Thailand, Laos, Indonesia and other ASEAN countries.

"The close economic ties between China and ASEAN will pave the way for BeiDou's entry. More importantly, in Southeast Asian countries located in low latitudes, BeiDou is more accurate than GPS," said Ming Dexiang, director of the Beidou Open Laboratory, an agency that promotes commercial applications of BeiDou.

Steady improvements to BeiDou's technologies have helped improve the accuracy of its navigation and location-detection systems. China announced earlier this year that BeiDou's satellites can locate ground-based users to an accuracy level of one or two meters of their exact location with the help of a new chip. Prior to this, BeiDou's accuracy level was a radius of 10 meters from the actual spot.

Li Xueli, an engineer working with BeiDou, said: "For users, there are two big improvements. One is the time the system takes to process your journey. This is down from 30 seconds to just three seconds. The second improvement is the position accuracy. The system can now tell if the car is on the main road or side road."

With precision of 1 to 2 meters, BeiDou is just behind the European Union's Galileo satellite system that gives consumers an accuracy level of just 1 meter. GPS' accuracy level is 5 meters while Russia's GLONASS satellite gives an accuracy level of 4.5 meters to 7.4 meters.

Given the potential for wresting lead globally, China is accelerating steps like launching new navigation satellites to expand the coverage area of BeiDou.

Yang Yuanxi, an academician with the Chinese Academy of Sciences and a member of the CPPCC National Committee, said: "China will launch six to eight satellites this year. After constructing a network of 18 satellites by around 2018, we will serve economies along the Belt and Road Initiative."

That will mark a long way from the first BeiDou satellite's launch 16 years ago. At that time, it was designed to serve the military. It was not available for commercial applications until 2012.

But within just four years of development, the commercial model has been widely applied in smartphones and automobiles in China to help consumers navigate through crowded traffic.

As of August 2016, about 759 smartphone models supported BeiDou's navigation services, accounting for 21 percent of all smartphones, reflecting the enormous potential of China's navigation satellite market.

In 2015, BeiDou was used to help Singapore in tracking vehicles. GLAC's Miao was instrumental in clinching this deal for BeiDou. A joint venture was set up to run the project. Singapore's Economic Development Board, a government agency for planning and executing strategies, poured 50 million yuan into it.

Sun Jiadong, an academician at the Chinese Academy of Sciences and former chief designer of the BeiDou system, said: "Domestic trials are checking for possible applications in foreign countries. The globalization boom for BeiDou will come around 2021, but we need to start as soon as possible."

Two areas where boats ride easy

1. China has set up a BeiDou-powered monitoring system to track and help fishing boats in Nansha Islands as they have been involved in frequent mishaps due to ordinary equipment on board.

So far, more than 30,000 boats have been equipped with BeiDou-enabled gadgets that can help fishermen contact others when telecom signals go weak.

The equipment can offer digital messaging services, positioning, navigation notices, emergency help and information on weather and sea waves.

It can also help fishery management departments to locate vessels, manage their navigation and extend help in time.

BeiDou's system has been widely applied in many areas including fishery departments of the government, fishery companies, large fishing boats and individual fishermen in Nansha Islands.

This has greatly reduced maritime accidents, brought IT to the marine fishery segment and professionalized information management in China.

2. China has set up a ship detection and monitoring system on the Lancang-Mekong River in southwestern China, using the BeiDou Navigation Satellite System.

Southwestern China is known for its rapids, dangerous shoals and a large number of telecommunication blind zones.

It has also been facing difficulties like straying foreign ships and international terrorism.

The system also makes use of a GPS satellite and a GSM network, and creates a 3-D monitoring and communication mechanism.

It is integrated with 3-D geographic information system that can provide users with clear images of landscapes, especially rapids.

With simulated maps of the Lancang-Mekong River, the system visualizes land forms around and can guide the ships on safe and optimized routes.
 
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【长征九号】3月6日,谭永华透露:在航天六院科研专家们的努力下,长征九号运载火箭的研制已经取得了突破性进展。目前已进行了70%左右的组件试验,用行话说,发生器和涡轮泵联试取得了圆满的成功,为后续工程的研制奠定了坚实的基础。个人估计在2028年左右可以上天。:coffee::D

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哈尔滨工业大学:空间立体动态高速激光通信网络技术。 研制了国内外首套空间光网络地面动态测试系统,可建立覆盖全球的空间光网络,实现天基信息网、互联网、移动通信网全面融合。还可为我军联合作战等提供广域移动通信保障,大大增强我军作战能力。:coffee::enjoy:

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Some elders happened to visit me so I asked them those few starting lines [marked in blue color] and they translated as follows :-)

[Long March-9] March 6th, Tan Yonghua reveals: the great efforts of the scientists at the Space Flight Research Institute No. 6, the developmental works of the Long March-9 rocket have made breakthrough progress. Already tested some 70% of the components, using jargons, generator and the turbine pump joint-test achieved full success, for the subsequent project development laid a solid foundation. Individual estimate that around 2028 the LM-9 rocket can be launched. :coffee::D
 
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Here’s what China has planned for its space program in 2017

ANDREW JONES
2017/03/17

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A view of the Moon's Mare Imbrium from the Chang'e-3 lander. China plans this year to attempt the first lunar sample return
in over four decades. (Photo: Chinese Academy of Sciences)


China is looking set for its most intense year of space activities so far, taking further steps towards a large space station, launching a complex mission to collect Moon samples, and aiming for a national launch record.

China’s space program is far from transparent, with most space launches only publicly announced after being declared successful. But the outlines of what is becoming a comprehensive space agenda are taking shape, including its major missions.

2016 was huge for China, featuring a record 23 launches, the Tiangong-2 and Shenzhou-11 human spaceflight missions, the debut of two huge new rockets, and some cutting edge space science. But more is expected for 2017.

The country’s main space contractor, the China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation (CASC), aims to launch 28 times or more, with the state-run missile maker, CASIC, expected to supplement with solid-fuelled launches as part of plans to gain a share of the small satellite launch market.

Three launches have already taken place successfully, but the first of two major missions - Tianzhou-1 - is scheduled for next month.

Tianzhou-1

China aims to take another crucial step towards constructing a space station when it launches Tianzhou-1, a cargo spacecraft that will be required to keep the future Chinese Space Station (CSS) fuelled and its astronauts fully sustained and supplied.

Tianzhou-1 will launch from the new coastal Wenchang Satellite Launch Centre on the second Long March 7 carrier rocket, and once in orbit dock with Tiangong-2, with the main aim of testing and proving liquid propellant refuelling technologies in microgravity. Live streams will be available.


Moon sample return

The other main event is Chang’e-5, a complex mission to collect 2kg of samples from the lunar surface and return them to Earth. It would be the first collection of Moon samples by any country in over 40 years, the last being Luna 24.

Set to launch in late November on China’s newest and by far largest rocket, the Long March 5, Chang’e-5 consists of an orbiter, lander, ascent module and a reentry vehicle. The mission profile means it will also provide valuable experience for expected Mars sample return and human lunar landing missions in the 2030s. Live coverage from Wenchang is expected, and will also be watched by tourists

Chang’e-5 also marks the third phase of the Chinese Lunar Exploration Plan, first proposed in the early 1990s and approved in 2004, to separately orbit, land on, and return samples from the Moon, following the success of Chang’e-1 and 2 orbiters and the Chang’e-3 lander and rover, Yutu, in 2013.

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Scientists work on China's Chang'e-5 landing and ascent vehicles (Framegrab/CCTV).

Space Science

In the last 18 months China has launched three pioneering space science missions – the DAMPE dark matter probe, Shijian-10 retrievable microgravity probe, and the QUESS quantum science satellite.

The final of the batch of four will be the Hard X-ray Modulation Telescope (HXMT) which, after many delays, is expected to launch around June.

HXMT will collect x-rays in order to study black holes and neutron stars, detect new sources of x-rays and create a high precision hard x-ray map of the sky. It will also be able to detect gamma ray bursts.

The first batch of results from DAMPE are also expected in the coming months.

New rockets, new satellites

The Long March 5, which debuted dramatically in November, will have its second launch in the summer, ahead of the Chang’e-5 mission. The June mission will launch Shijian-18, based on a new, large 7-tonne DFH-5 satellite bus, to geosynchronous orbit.

Shijian-13, to launch from Xichang on the veteran Long March 3B in April, will be the country's first high-throughput satellite as part of plans to provide fast internet access. It is based on the DFH-3B satellite platform and will also conduct space-to-ground laser communications experiments in while 36,000 kilometres above Earth.

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The first Long March 5 rocket being rolled out at Wenchang (China Daily).

Weather, positioning, observation and more

As part of its plans to establish a large civil space infrastructure by the middle of the next decade, China will launch a range of Earth observation, weather and navigation and positioning satellites in 2017.

A number of Haiyang all-weather ocean observation satellites are due to launch, as well as Gaofen-5 and Gaofen-6, which will add to the China High-resolution Earth Observation System (CHEOS).

These satellite constellations will be used for disaster warning, urban planning, weather forecasting, water resource assessments, agriculture and more, according to official statements.

Work will continue on its own version of America’s GPS system, Beidou, launching 6-8 more satellites this year, including a number of dual launches to medium Earth orbit, starting in July from Xichang in Sichuan.

While China has developed its new cryogenic Long March 5, 6 and 7 rockets, the older, established hypergolic Long March 2, 3 and 4 launch vehicles will be used for the vast majority of missions.

The Long March 3B is expected to launch into high orbits the Zhongxing-6C communications satellite, the 6-8 Beidou sats, and Alcomsat-1 for Algeria. The Fengyun-2H weather satellite will also launch from Xichang on Long March 3 variant.

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Above: A Long March 3B launches Belintersat-1 for Belarus in 2016.

Satellites developed commercially, though by entities with close ties to state aerospace players, will be launched, including Jilin-2 and -3, and the second set of Gaojing (or Superview) high-res Earth observation satellites.

In addition to Alcomsat-1, EgyptSat II, VRSS-2 for Venezuela, and SaudiSAT-5B represent international contracted satellite launches that could go ahead this year.

Scheduled for around July is Zangheng-1, also known as the China Seismo-Electromagnetic Satellite (CSES), a collaborative project with Italy to monitor electromagnetic and atmospheric phenomena and study correlations with the occurrence of seismic events.

The next in the series of classified Yaogan satellites, long suspected to be for spying and intelligence, are also possible missions.

LandSpace-1, a planned Chinese commercial launch vehicle, should also debut this year.

There will also be a number of secondary payloads riding along on Long March rockets, including four CAS satellites, with masses between 25 and 50 kg, for amateur radio communication and education, as well as Shaonian weixing, developed by students in Urumqi, Xinjiang, and likely many others not disclosed until once in orbit.

China does not have a public launch manifest, but sites such as Spaceflight101 keep a regularly updated international list of launches.

On Earth: Space Day, cooperation, new astronauts

There will also be important terrestrial-based activities during 2017.

On April 24, the anniversary of the launch of the country’s first satellite (Dongfanghong-1) in 1970, China will host its second national ‘Space Day’, as part of space and science education outreach, and seeking to secure political rewards for the ruling Communist Party for major achievements.

The occasion will also be used to announce the winners of a public competition to both name and create a logo for China’s 2020 Mars mission, which includes an orbiter, lander and rover.

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Above: The 8 finalist logos for the China Mars 2020 mission competition (CMEP).

New astronauts: China will this year start a third round of astronaut selection in preparation for the Chinese Space Station. The China Astronaut Centre will seek applicants from backgrounds including space engineers and scientists, as well as the air force pilots that made up the first two selection rounds in 1998 and 2010.

International cooperation: The China Manned Space Agency (CMSA) and the United Nations Office for Outer Space Affairs (UNOOSA) is expected to issue an international call for science project proposals from UN member states for cooperation aboard the future Chinese space station, following an agreement between the two last March.

China is also continuing, via the China National Space Administration (CNSA), a body designed to facilitate international engagement rather than being a true space agency, to sign a diverse range of deals with countries across the world, both bilaterally and multilaterally through the BRICS, APSCO, ISECG and more.

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The crew of Shenzhou-10 after landing in Inner Mongolia in 2013.

Across 2011-2016, China signed 43 space cooperation agreements or memoranda of understanding with 29 countries, space agencies and international organisations, according to CNSA.

One of the more significant agreements set up a joint committee along with Italy’s ASI to explore cooperation on long term human spaceflight.

…Surprises?

As well as what is outlined, there may well be surprise payloads making their way to various orbits.

Out of nowhere last October China announced it would be launching XPNAV-1 a month later, an unknown yet pioneering satellite that is testing the use of pulsars for navigation in deep space, which could help cut reliance on ground stations.

That a scale version of a next-generation crew reentry capsule would be tested during the debut of the Long March 7 in June was also a bolt delivered from the blue last March.

Another curiosity was a low key experiment to test controversial EmDrive thruster technology aboard Tiangong-2 in 2016, and 2017 may also have surprises in store.

In the background

Other developments running quietly in the background include work on the Chinese Space Station core module, Tianhe-1, which has entered a testing phase following construction, and will be prepared for launch in 2018 (or 2019).

For this, and the related Tianzhou-2 and Shenzhou-12 missions, China’s astronauts are now training for EVAs, or ‘spacewalks’, and other new mission requirements, according to China's first woman in space, Liu Yang.

Work is ongoing on another new launcher, Long March 8, for debut next year, as well as the development of a next-generation crewed spacecraft, which would be capable of deep space and crewed lunar landing missions.

Chang’e-4, which will make the world’s first attempt to land on the far side of the Moon, is being readied for launch in late 2018, preceded by a necessary communications relay probe.

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Above: The far side of the Moon and distant Earth, captured by the Chang’e 5-T1 mission in 2014 (Chinese Academy of Sciences).

Further plans to explore the Moon – including its far side and poles - are also in the pipeline, as is early work on a Saturn-V class rocket, Long March 9, which could take astronauts to the Moon.

Following a large budget boost last year, the National Space Science Centre (NSSC) is now working on and developing another set of missions to investigate fundamental questions concerning the Earth, solar system and universe.

How to read China’s space activities?

From the above, it can be seen that China has a comprehensive and expanding space programme, which seeks to boost independent capabilities and infrastructure, communications, social, economic and technological development, as well as participate in human spaceflight, interplanetary missions and space science.

China’s space programme also appears to be part of its international standing and engagement, helping to present the country as possessing tremendous technological capabilities and also being willing and able to cooperate with all manner of countries within the current international system.

It also plays a role in broad foreign policy goals, including the Belt and Road initiative, as underlined by statements on the role of Beidou and an agreement with Italy, and seeks to stress a message of ‘open’ and ‘peaceful development’.

As with other major space programmes, there are military aspects and implications too, with Beidou allowing services such as secure communications and weapons guidance for the Chinese military and remote sensing satellites also having a role.

As space technology is inherently ‘dual use’, this fact, the lack of transparency and involvement of the People’s Liberation Army in the implementation of the space programme, leads to questions and concerns over China’s intentions in space. Any testing on anti-satellite technology, which China has undertaken previously, will be a closely guarded secret.

China could well launch more times than Russia again this year, while dwarfing the launch rates of Asian rivals India and Japan, but Beijing is far from threatening to be dominant in space. The country’s technological capabilities are still behind the top space players, especially the United States, which now also has a burgeoning and incredibly ambitious private space sector, along with by far the world’s largest civil and military space budgets.

At the same time China is demonstrating signs of serious independent aerospace innovation and capabilities, a long term vision and, despite a very slow launch rate, a commitment human spaceflight that will eventually leave low Earth orbit. Along with this go growing space science, lunar and planetary exploration ambitions, and a clear understanding of the multifaceted manner in which space can play a role in development.

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Above: Artist's conception of China's Mars 2020 lander and rover setting down on the Red Planet (Xinhua).

Calendar

April: Tianzhou-1 (TBA); Shijian 13 (TBA); national Space Day (24th)
June: Shijian-18; HXMT (TBC)
July: Beidou-3M1, Beidou-3M2
August: Zangheng-1 (CSES)
September: Beidou-3M3; Beidou-3M4; Zhongxing-6C; Gaofen-5
October: Four 'Tianyi' satellites; Beidou-3M5, Beidou-3M6,
November: Chang’e-5
December: Beidou-3M7, Beidou-3M8; GaoJing-3 & -4; Beidou-2G8;

TBA/possible missions: VRSS-2; Alcomsat-1; SaudiSAT-5B; Fengyun-3D; Gaofen-6; Ministar-1; Shaonian Weixing; Fengyun-2H; Jilin-2 & 3; Luojia-1; Changguang-1; Yaogan 31, Yaogan 32.

Launched:
1. TJS-2 - Long March 3B; Xichang Satellite Launch Centre
2. Kuaizhou-1A - Jiuquan Satellite Launch Centre
3. Tiankun-1 - Kaituo(zhe)-2 - Jiuquan Satellite Launch Centre

http://gbtimes.com/china/heres-what-china-has-planned-its-space-program-2017
 
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