Home>News Center>China
       
 

China to launch Probe No. 2
(Xinhua)
Updated: 2004-06-24 16:54

China is scheduled to launch the second probe satellite of the "Double Star Project" by the end of July, said sources with the Commission of Science, Technology and Industry for National Defense.

The commission made the announcement Thursday, declaring the satellite and the carrier rocket have met the requirements for launching.

The satellite, or Probe No. 2, will be China's first civil satellite to be launched in 2004. It was jointly developed by a company under the China Aerospace Technology Corporation, the Chinese Academy of Sciences and five European research institutes under the European Space Agency.

The "Double Star Project" is the first China-Europe joint satellite probe. It was designed to probe important areas of two magnetic fields of geospace which have never been covered by any satellites, comprising the earth's magnetic field, ionosphere and middle to high layers of atmosphere.

Compared with Probe No. 1, which was launched last December, Probe No. 2 is much improved in magnetic clarity.

Once Probe No. 2 is successfully launched, the two satellites would start human beings' first probe into earth space from six dimensions. The system would be capable of probing the incidence and development of catastrophic space weather.

The probe would provide scientific data for safety of space activities and protection of humans' living environment, said Sun Laiyan, director of the China National Space Administration.

"The successful launch of Probe No. 2 is key to the implementation of the Double Star Project and would prove to the world China's ability in developing satellites for scientific probe," said Sun.

The satellite is slated to blast off aboard a Long March 2C/SM carrier rocket. This will be the 77th launch of the Long March rocket.



 
  Today's Top News     Top China News
 

Price hikes not to stop until October

 

   
 

S. Korea bans beheading footage on Internet

 

   
 

DPRK: Concrete plans can help nuclear talks

 

   
 

Audit: US$170 million misused in budget

 

   
 

China set to clarify bankruptcy protection

 

   
 

Astronauts to take riskier spacewalk

 

   
  Five detained for deadly boat capsizal
   
  Audit: US$170 million misused in budget
   
  China aims at regional maritime law centre
   
  Migrant workers get injury insurance
   
  Shanghai to deal with shortage of places to go
   
  Development fund to aid small, medium firms
   
 
  Go to Another Section  
 
 
  Story Tools  
   
  News Talk  
  When will china have direct elections?  
Advertisement