China completes global deployment of BeiDou Navigation Satellite System
By
Yu Jianbin, People’s Daily
The last
BeiDou Navigation Satellite-3 constellation satellite, also the 55th
of the BeiDou satellite family, was successfully launched on board a Long
March-3B rocket at the Xichang Satellite Launch Center in Southwest China’s
Sichuan Province at 9:43 am on June 23.
The full
deployment of the BeiDou Navigation Satellite System (BDS) constellation,
accomplished six months ahead of schedule, has come to a successful closure and
drawn worldwide attention.
In a
video message, the United Nations (UN) Office for Outer Space Affairs congratulated
on the complete deployment of the BDS constellation, acknowledged the BeiDou
system’s role in promoting the world’s social and economic development, and
praised its significant contributions to the peaceful use of outer space and
international cooperation, such as UN activities in outer space.
The
final launch went through twists and turns. Due to the failures of two previous
launch missions, the entire procedure was rechecked for times, and the launch
time was postponed from May to June. Then the launch scheduled for June 16 was
delayed again after technical problems were found in pre-launch tests.
The
final satellite is a geosynchronous earth orbit satellite, and will undergo a
series of in-orbit tests before it is commissioned. Comprehensive tests for the
entire BDS system will be conducted to ensure reliable operation and
outstanding performances of the system.
Upon the
completion of the tests, BDS will provide all-time, all-weather and
high-precision positioning, navigation and timing services for users as well as
the services of satellite-based augmentation, short message communication,
precise point positioning and other characteristic services.
The BDS
construction was initiated in 1994. Over the past 26 years, China has conducted
44 BDS launch missions at Xichang Satellite Launch Center. By using launch
vehicles of Long March-3A series, the country has launched 4 BDS-1 experimental
satellites, 55 BDS-2 and BDS-3 constellation satellites into predetermined
orbits without failure.
It is
worth noting that an intensive campaign of 18 launch missions was carried out
within two and a half years since the global constellation deployment started
in 2017.
Facing
the challenging task of fighting against the COVID-19 outbreak this year, the
entire BDS team has been working tirelessly on both frontlines – the
constellation deployment and the epidemic control and prevention, and secured
the final victory in the BDS global constellation deployment.
With
strong support from telemetry, track and command, ground operation,
inter-satellite link management, application validation and other subsystems,
all in-orbit satellites previously launched have been commissioned.
The past
three decades and more have witnessed the explorations and practices of three
generations of devoted BeiDou engineers, who have gone through a whole process
including program demonstration, implementation, dual-satellite positioning
service, regional constellation deployment, and global coverage provision.
Relying
on themselves, they have blazed a trail of innovation and self-transcendence,
and succeeded in building BDS, an aerospace system that has the largest scale, the
vastest coverage, the highest service standard and the closest relevance to
daily life of the people in the history of China.
The BDS
is also the first major Chinese aerospace infrastructure that provides public
services worldwide. As China’s great contributions to the development of global
satellite navigation, it has provided more options for the people around the
world with better and more precise spatial and temporal services, and gained valuable
experience for the modernization of China’s major scientific and technological
program management.
Today,
BDS is used in more than half of the countries in the world. It will continue
to participate in international satellite navigation affairs, push forward the
multi-system compatibility and sharing, carry out international exchanges and
cooperation, promote its international applications according to the needs of
the global users, and share the latest BDS development achievements.
By 2035,
China will build a more advanced, ubiquitous, integrated and more intelligent
comprehensive positioning, navigation and timing system, which will offer more
powerful abilities for spatial and temporal information services, and make
greater contributions to the further exploration of mankind.
The BDS
satellite and the launch vehicle for this mission were developed by China
Academy of Space Technology (CAST) and China Academy of Launch Vehicle
Technology (CALT) respectively. Both institutions are affiliated to China
Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation. This was the 336th flight
of the Long March launch vehicles.
Picture shows BeiDou Navigation Satellite-3 constellation |
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