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China's Beidou satellite navigation ready to be used for smartphones

BEIJING - A Chinese company has rolled out a chip that can help smartphones get easy access to the country's homegrown GPS-like Beidou System.

The 40-nanometer chip, developed by Shanghai Beiga Satellite Technology Co., was revealed at an exhibition event in Shanghai that promotes civilian use of military technologies.

Wang Yongping, general manager of Beiga, said they are currently doing test work with some smartphone, who are expected to begin mass production of devices with the chip next year, according to a report by China News Service.

The chip is a sign that China's independently developed Beidou System will be applied to consumer electronics field. Previously, chips using the Beidou system were too large and had high energy consumption in daily use.

According to the company, the chip can also be used on tablet computers and wearable devices.
 
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PLA drill applies China's own GPS
2015-2-6 15:41:36

The People's Liberation Army (PLA) finished a two-day drill on Friday, testing application of China's independently developed global satellite navigation system in combat in Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region.

The military used the Beidou Navigation Satellite System for precise positioning and navigating, real-time location reporting and data transmission over long distances, according to a news release from the PLA General Staff Headquarters.

It said that Beidou has allowed the armies to be more precise in command, weapon firing and logistics and that the technology has "been integrated into the PLA's modern command system and weapon platform".

Beidou is the Chinese equivalent of the United States' NAVSTAR Global Positioning System and Russia's Global Navigation Satellite System. Currently, Beidou owns 20 satellites.
 
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China tests new carrier rocket's power system
(Xinhua) Updated: 2015-02-09 20:55

BEIJING -- Chinese scientists have completed a ground test on the power system of the country's next-generation carrier rocket which may fly as early as next year.

Scientists test-fired the engines of Long March-5, which uses non-toxic and no-polluting liquefied propellant, on a ground facility to test "coordination and reliability" of the power system, the State Administration of Science, Technology and Industry for National Defense (SASTIND) said on Monday.

The Long March-5 rockets, designed for the final chapter of China's three-step -- orbiting, landing and finally returning -- lunar program, and for the launches of future space stations, will have a payload capacity of 25 tonnes to low Earth orbits, or 14 tonnes to geostationary transfer orbit.

A test flight for Long March-5 has been scheduled in 2016 from China's Hainan province, the SASTIND said.

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*****
The test is for CZ-5 core first stage using China newly developed, most powerful Liquid hydrogen/Liquid Oxygen rocket engine - YF-77.
 
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China's Beidou Gets Infrastructure Boost on Qinghai-Tibet Plateau
2015-02-24

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File Chinese-made Beidou satellite [Photo: Baidu]

Precision infrastructure for the Chinese-made Beidou satellite navigation system will be built on the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau, part of the effort to create a nationwide base station network for the GPS-like system.

The announcement comes from Qinghai's First Institute of Surveying and Mapping.

The infrastructure includes base station networks, data processing, broadcasting systems, and user terminals.

The Beidou system currently includes 20 satellites.

It began providing precision positioning, real-time navigation, location reporting, precise time readings, and short message services for users in China and Asia Pacific in December of 2012.

The system is scheduled to go global in 2020.
 
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China's satellite network aims for 'centimeters' accuracy
Summary:Beidou navigation system will comprise 30 satellites by 2020, as China looks to improve its accuracy to within centimeters to better compete with the U.S. system, currently used by the world's majority.


By Eileen Yu | December 30, 2013 -- 07:36 GMT (15:36 GMT+08:00)

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Operational since December 2011 , the national satellite network--which means Big Dipper in Chinese--now has an error margin of 5 meters, but Chinese officials want to improve this to within centimeters to compete with the U.S. system, currently used by the world's majority, noted a Xinhua report.

Six satellites were launched last year, with 16 now serving the Asia-Pacific region, and the overall number is expected to hit 30 globally by 2020. State-owned China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation said in December 2011 that the Beidou service will be offered free for all to use and will interoperate with the U.S. GPS system, Russia's Glonass, and Europe's Galileo when it is expected to be completed in 2019.

Ran Chengqi, director of the China Satellite Navigation Office, said during a press conference in Beijing that Beidou has been providing accurate and stable services to users in the Asia-Pacific region, offering functions and performance that are "comparable" to the U.S. system.

Citing assessment during its trials, Ran said the Chinese satellite network's accuracy was within 7 meters in Beijing, Zhengzhou, Xi’an, and Urumqi in central and north China, adding that this rate would hit 5 meters in some low-latitude Asian countries.

"Satellite navigation is an important part of a country's infrastructure, and it's certainly a combined civilian and military infrastructure," Ran said, adding the completion of the Beidou system should contribute to national defense.

In Shanghai, the system can achieve an accuracy of within 50 centimeters with two new enhanced ground stations. "Two stations have been set up in Shanghai to provide positioning services especially for mobile devices that have been able to cover the whole city," Shen Xuemin, deputy director of the Chinese Academy of Sciences' navigation department, said in the Xinhua report.

It noted that Beidou is the only satellite navigation system that offers telecommunication services, which means it can communicate with users via text messages in addition to providing location and time information.

Liu Qixu, director of the Beidou Satellite System Application Center, said China is encouraging other Asian countries to use its system by offering the service for free, as the U.S. does with its GPS network.

China in May announced plans to build Beidou stations in Pakistan , and in April signed a US$317 million agreement to build a national remote sensing system--running on Beidou--in Thailand. Laos also signed a similar deal in late-April to tap the Chinese navigation system to develop the country's agriculture and crack down on opium cultivation, while Brunei said it would use Beidou to build a modern capital.

According to Xinhua, over 1,000 Beidou terminals were used after the 2008 Sichuan earthquake to provide information on the disaster area, as well as during the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games and 2010 Shanghai Expo to identify traffic congestion and supervise venues.

4G to boost Beidou use
China's fledgling 4G ecosystem also will help speed up and pave the way for navigation services running on Beidou. "A modern information system needs three components--navigation system to provide timing and positioning services, communication system to transfer information, and computing system for data processing," Li Changjiang, chief commander of the Beidou system, said in a separate Xinhua report. "4G will help promote the use of the Beidou system."

The Chinese government earlier this month awarded 4G licenses to the country's top three telecom operators-- China Mobile , China Telecom , and China Unicom --which will bring 4G services to 340 cities by 2014.

"The 4G networks will accelerate data transfer and, thus, broaden the use of navigation services ," Li said. For instance, he suggested that navigation satellites could be tapped to vehicle flow on a particular stretch of highway or street. "In the past, networks overloaded easily in high-traffic areas, but with 4G, the speed is fast enough for real-time measurement of traffic."

Chen Fuzhou, director of the Jiangsu BDS Application Industry Institute, added: "4G networks need the timing services of the Beidou satellites as mobile communications require very precise timing to support high speeds, especially for multimedia."

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BeiDou Precision Nav Will Receive GPS, GLONASS, Galileo Signals
February 9, 2015 - By GPS World staff

A senior Chinese government space official on Feb. 5 said precision-navigation user receivers in China will be fitted with chipsets receiving satellite signals from BeiDou, GPS, GLONASS, and Galileo, according to Space News. The move could accelerate the trend among navigation chipset and receiver makers to build gear for multi-constellation reception, and at the same time undermine regional measures to promote one system over others.

Chen Zhi, deputy chief designer of the China Aerospace Science and Industry Corp., said China’s early deployment of satellite navigation receivers for precision agriculture already feature multi-constellation GPS-Beidou receivers.

The United States and European Union have signed World Trade Organization agreements for their constellations, GPS and Galileo. China and Russia are not part of the agreements.
 
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Argentina to Welcome First Chinese Satellite Tracking Station Outside China

First Chinese satellite tracking station outside the country will be built in Argentina's Neuquen province, part of the Patagonia region.

MOSCOW (Sputnik) – Argentina is to become the location of the first Chinese satellite tracking station outside the country the newspaper La Manana De Cordoba reported on Thursday.

The Argentine National Congress has approved the bill ratifying economic and technological cooperation between Argentina and China, including the construction of a Chinese satellite tracking station in Argentina's Neuquen province, part of the Patagonia region.

The two nations will "work together on the development of space technology for peaceful uses and cooperate in the field of space activities for mutual benefit," the bill reads.

The measure was passed by 133 votes to 107. The final decision was preceded by a long debate that lasted for nearly nine hours, as members of the opposition questioned the possibility of the site being used for military purposes, despite the fact that China has repeatedly stated its peaceful intentions in space.

The expected Chinese station is the first based on domestic technology to be constructed on the territory of another state. Its key target is to help China expand its space program, including Chinese lunar exploration. Beijing also promised that Argentina would get access to strategic information relating to satellite tracking.

After its first manned space flight in 2003, China has organized regular journeys into space, developing the relevant technologies and international connections. Today, China is working on reusable space transportation systems for the next generation of space travel. To this end, a prototype of the spacecraft "Shenlong" is being tested. China is also a contender to win the "lunar race," by broadening and developing its automatic Moon research program.

Argentina to Welcome First Chinese Satellite Tracking Station Outside China / Sputnik International
 
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Argentina to Welcome First Chinese Satellite Tracking Station Outside China

First Chinese satellite tracking station outside the country will be built in Argentina's Neuquen province, part of the Patagonia region.

MOSCOW (Sputnik) – Argentina is to become the location of the first Chinese satellite tracking station outside the country the newspaper La Manana De Cordoba reported on Thursday.

The Argentine National Congress has approved the bill ratifying economic and technological cooperation between Argentina and China, including the construction of a Chinese satellite tracking station in Argentina's Neuquen province, part of the Patagonia region.

The two nations will "work together on the development of space technology for peaceful uses and cooperate in the field of space activities for mutual benefit," the bill reads.

The measure was passed by 133 votes to 107. The final decision was preceded by a long debate that lasted for nearly nine hours, as members of the opposition questioned the possibility of the site being used for military purposes, despite the fact that China has repeatedly stated its peaceful intentions in space.

The expected Chinese station is the first based on domestic technology to be constructed on the territory of another state. Its key target is to help China expand its space program, including Chinese lunar exploration. Beijing also promised that Argentina would get access to strategic information relating to satellite tracking.

After its first manned space flight in 2003, China has organized regular journeys into space, developing the relevant technologies and international connections. Today, China is working on reusable space transportation systems for the next generation of space travel. To this end, a prototype of the spacecraft "Shenlong" is being tested. China is also a contender to win the "lunar race," by broadening and developing its automatic Moon research program.

Argentina to Welcome First Chinese Satellite Tracking Station Outside China / Sputnik International

Does this mean that China don't need anymore to rely on EU tracking for moon mission??
 
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good when its going operational
i was reading somewhere that pakistan is also going to use this system
 
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