China launches "Compass" navigation satellite
(Xinhua) Updated: 2007-04-14 08:34
 A
Compass navigation satellite is successfully launched from Xichang,
Sichuan Province April 14, 2007. [Xinhua]
 | XICHANG, Sichuan Province --
China on early Saturday morning launched a navigation satellite, part of the
country's "Compass" navigational system, which is expected to provide services
to customers all over China and neighboring countries by 2008.
The
carrier rocket, Long March 3-A, blasted off from the Xichang Satellite Launch
Center in southwest China's Sichuan Province at 4:11 a.m., and sources with the
center said that the satellite had "accurately" entered its orbit, at the height
of 21,500 km.
The "Compass" navigational system is mainly designed for
the country's economic development, providing navigation and positioning
services in transportation, meteorology, petroleum prospecting, forest fire
monitoring, disaster forecast, telecommunications and public security, among
others.
With more satellites to be sent into orbits in the coming years,
the system will cover China and its neighboring countries by 2008, before being
expanded into a global network of navigation and positioning. On February 3,
China successfully put a test "Compass" satellite into the orbit, the fourth of
such experimental satellites launched since 2000.
Experts said the
"Compass" navigation experimental system is operating well and has played a
significant role in providing all-weather and all-day navigation and positioning
information.
China is one of the few countries that are capable of
developing navigation satellite system on its own. Previous reports said it will
provide clients with positioning accuracy within 10 meters, velocity accuracy
with 0.2 meter per second and timing accuracy within 50 nanoseconds.
The
system can help clients know their location at any time and place with accurate
longitude, latitude and altitude data, and will offer "safer" positioning,
velocity, timing communications for authorized users.
The system
includes at least 35 satellites, five geostationary Earth orbit (GEO) and 30
medium Earth orbit (MEO) satellites, according to previous reports.
China is willing to cooperate with other countries in developing its
satellite navigation industry to allow the "Compass" system to operate with
other global satellite positioning systems such as the United States' GPS,
Russia's GLONASS and Europe's GALILEO navigational system, sources said.
The satellite and carrier rocket were developed respectively by the
China Academy of Space Technology and China Academy of Launch Vehicle
Technology, which are under the China Aerospace Science and Technology
Corporation.
The launch represents the 97th flight of China's Long March
series of rockets.
China's first manned spacecraft, Shenzhou V, blasted
off in October 2003, making China the third nation after the Soviet Union and
the United States to send a human into space, and another manned spaceship
Shenzhou VI carrying two astronauts circled around the Earth continuously for
five days before a safe return in October, 2005.
China's next manned
space flight Shenzhou VII, the third in its space program, is scheduled to take
place in 2008.
 A Compass navigation satellite is successfully launched from
Xichang, Sichuan Province April 14, 2007. [Xinhua]  |
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