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China Outer Space Science, Technology and Explorations: News & Updates

Hunting for ripples from the Big Bang
By ZHANG ZHIHAO | China Daily | Updated: 2017-10-24 07:08
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Qinghai-Tibet Plateau one of 'the best' places to detect gravitational waves

China is building a new facility to detect primordial gravitational waves-tiny ripples in the fabric of space-time that were generated during the birth of the universe.

The facility is located 5,250 meters above sea level in Ngari prefecture, in the western part of the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau, where the air is thin and dry-"an ideal place to detect possibly the weakest type of gravitational waves", said Zhang Xinmin, the project's lead scientist.

Its first telescope is set to be completed by the end of 2019, and the facility will be operational in 2020, said Zhang, who is also a researcher at the Chinese Academy of Sciences' Institute of High Energy Physics.

"It will be the world's highest observatory for primordial gravitational waves," he said, adding that there are only four ideal locations on Earth suitable to detect such waves. The other three are in Antarctica, Chile's Atacama Desert and Greenland. "The one we have is the best spot in the northern hemisphere," Zhang said.

Apart from searching for the waves, scientists also plan to detect cosmic rays with high precision and build China's largest optical telescope, he said.

Chinese universities and institutes, as well as research organizations from Japan and the United States, are interested in joining the projects in Ngari, said Xue Suijian, deputy director of the National Astronomical Observatories of China.

"China should utilize the unique geographical advantage of the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau, also known as the 'Roof of the World', to advance science, along with Tibetans' social and economic development," Xue said.

Primordial waves were generated immediately after the Big Bang about 13.8 billion years ago, hence they are called "the first cry of the universe", Zhang said. The waves are so ancient that only traces are left in the residual radiation from the universe's early moments. "Studying these waves can help prove many of our hypotheses and unravel the origin and evolution of the universe," he said.

While these discoveries are exciting for scientists, applications using gravitational waves are still decades away. However, "detecting these waves requires extremely precise and advanced equipment, ranging from lasers to data analysis," he said. "These tools might be useful in our daily life in the future."

Apart from the facility in Ngari, China also has two other science projects in the works dedicated to detecting gravitational waves: Project Taiji and Project TianQin, according to Xinhua News Agency.

In Project Taiji, China plans to launch three satellites around 2030 to detect waves created by black holes. In Project TianQin, the country plans to spend 15 billion yuan ($2.26 billion) to build a gravitational wave detection network consisting of satellites and land observatories by 2035.
 
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China to freely share data from weather, carbon satellites: official
Source: Xinhua| 2017-10-25 03:51:51|Editor: Yang Yi



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People attend the China Day event during the Group on Earth Observations (GEO) week 2017 in Washington D.C., the United States, on Oct. 24, 2017. China will freely share data from its new-generation weather satellite Fengyun-4 as well as its first carbon monitoring satellite TanSat with international users, Yang Jun, Director General of the National Satellite Meteorological Center, part of the China Meteorological Administration, said here Tuesday. (Xinhua/Yin Bogu)

WASHINGTON, Oct. 24 (Xinhua) -- China will freely share data from its new-generation weather satellite Fengyun-4 as well as its first carbon monitoring satellite TanSat with international users, a Chinese official said here Tuesday.

Yang Jun, director general of the National Satellite Meteorological Center, part of the China Meteorological Administration, made the remarks at the China Day event during the Group on Earth Observations (GEO) week 2017 in Washington, D.C.

"These two satellites represent the latest outcomes of scientific and technological innovation in China, and also the contribution made by China to global meteorological disaster prevention and mitigation, climate change response and economic-social development," Yang said.

"In the future, we will continue to provide more and better satellite observational products for users worldwide," he said.

FengYun-4, launched last December, was the first of China's second-generation weather satellites in geostationary orbit and also the country's first quantitative remote-sensing satellite in high orbit.

Yang said the testing of FengYun-4 platform and payloads has been completed recently, showing that the satellite is stable in operation with good performance.

"The China Meteorological Administration is in the process of testing FengYun-4's various products including cloud, atmosphere and surface conditions," he continued.

"FengYun-4 is scheduled to be put into use in early 2018, with its data and products being freely available to international users," he said.

TanSat, also launched last December, was China's first satellite to monitor greenhouse gas emissions, which Yang said was "of great importance to a full understanding of the global carbon cycle process and its impact on global climate change."

The Chinese official said that the satellite's in-orbit test has also been completed and that all performance indicators met the design requirements, with the precision of carbon concentration monitoring being below four ppm (parts per million).

"We have developed a carbon satellite data sharing policy, and level 1A, 1B, 2 and 3 data will be open to users worldwide freely," he said, referring to data that have been processed and relevant products.

Yang added that data and products from TanSat will be released through Fengyun satellite data center website and national integrated Earth observation data sharing platform in quasi real-time.

"We have a key carbon initiative and we would love to see China more engaged in that," Barbara Ryan, secretariat director of GEO, an intergovernmental organization, told reporters at the event.

"I think your satellite is going to be a key contribution, and particularly with your broad open data polices that will help enormously, really give us better estimates of how the Earth climate is changing," Ryan said.
 
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Engineers lost contact with the space laboratory last year, and has been gradually falling back to Earth ever since
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An out-of-control space laboratory is falling towards the Earth and will crash land soon, experts say.

The Chinese space station is accelerating its fall towards us and will reach the ground in the coming months, Harvard astrophysicist Jonathan McDowell told the Guardian. It is decaying quickly and he expects "expect it will come down a few months from now – late 2017 or early 2018", he told the paper.

The Tiangong 1 station was launched in 2011 as one of the great hopes of the Chinese ambitions in space, and as part of a plan to show itself off as a global superpower. The country's space agency referred to the station as the "Heavenly Palace" and conducted a range of missions, some of which included astronauts.

But last year scientists at Chinese's CNSA space agency said that they had lost control of the lab, and that it would now be heading towards Earth. That put an end to months of speculation, as experts watching the path of the station suggested that it had been behaving strangely.



China's space station is hurtling to Earth, say experts
And it also sparked immediate concerns that people on the ground could be at risk from the falling space debris.

It's unlikely that anyone will be harmed by the crash, or that anyone would see it at all, since it's most likely that the lab will drop into the sea. But it's still possible that it would crash somewhere near people.

It's very difficult to predict where it will fall because engineers have lost control of the capsule and it will be thrown around by the wind as it comes down. Even a slight push from the weather could send it from one continent to the next.

Much of the debris will burn up on its way into Earth's atmosphere. But chunks as big as 100kg will make their way through and fall from the skies, said McDowell.

In the past, space junk has fallen within sight of people, and there have even been reports of injuries.

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/s...earth-china-cnsa-nasa-when-date-a7999526.html
 
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The operational life time of this space center was only until 2013 after which it was planned to de-orbit. Something of a planned service, not really a failure..

On 21 March 2016, after a lifespan extended by two years, the Space Engineering Office announced that Tiangong-1 had officially ended its service.[4][23] They went on to state that the telemetry link with Tiangong-1 had been lost.[24] A couple of months later, amateur satellite trackers watching Tiangong-1 found that China's space agency had lost control of the station.[25] In September, after conceding they had lost control over the station, officials announced that the station would re-enter and burn up in the atmosphere late in 2017.[26][27]It is currently expected to deorbit some time between October 2017 and April 2018.[3]
 
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Tiangong I has been orbiting for about 6 years now and was decommissioned last year after the crews returned to the surface. It served the purpose.

Pretty good prediction: It had been announced last year that the station would fall back to earth sometime late this year.

Tiangong I was followed by Tiangong II, another test vehicle, but not a permanent one. It will also eventually be discarded.

Tiangong II was launched last year but, like Tiangong I, it is also not a permanent space station, but more of a test vehicle.

The larger module will be launched sometime around 2019-2020. China is still at testing and trying phase.

Tiangong II, which has succeeded Tiangong I:

t01dab876444e7ddb7f.jpg
 
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Tiangong I has been orbiting for about 6 years now and was decommissioned last year after the crews returned to the surface. It served the purpose.

Pretty good prediction: It had been announced last year that the station would fall back to earth sometime late this year.

Tiangong I was followed by Tiangong II, another test vehicle, but not a permanent one. It will also eventually be discarded.

Tiangong II was launched last year but, like Tiangong I, it is also not a permanent space station, but more of a test vehicle.

The larger module will be launched sometime around 2019-2020. China is still at testing and trying phase.

Tiangong II, which has succeeded Tiangong I:

t01dab876444e7ddb7f.jpg
Nice......

But the OP is about the sh*t crashing down on earth and follows an unpredictable trajectory.

Not sure if anyone is tracking it. Any update on that? It's a 31% probability on land and 69% on sea.
 
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Nice......

But the OP is about the sh*t crashing down on earth and follows an unpredictable trajectory.

Not sure if anyone is tracking it. Any update on that? It's a 31% probability on land and 69% on sea.
This thread was made to give the impression that China lost control of its space lab(and thus, the Chinese space program has met a setback) when in fact, it was just a decommisioned space lab.

haha so...how u like getting ur *** busted?
 
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This thread was made to give the impression that China lost control of its space lab(and thus, the Chinese space program has met a setback) when in fact, it was just a decommisioned space lab.
Troll primero uno arrived.

I know what happened to the lab. It wasn't opened under the impression that the stuff immediately stopped working and is falling. It's about a falling meteorite having a mass of 100KG coming down at high velocity.

Read the title again rather than making bravados and rhetoric.
 
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Nice......

But the OP is about the sh*t crashing down on earth and follows an unpredictable trajectory.

Not sure if anyone is tracking it. Any update on that? It's a 31% probability on land and 69% on sea.

The space station has never passed over India. So, no s*** is involved!

I hope its smash down over Beijing...:lol:

Just a monthly trade surplus with India would cover any damage.
 
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Why cannot China make good products? Chinese products are never reliable, and don't last long.

I hope its smash down over Beijing...:lol:


Chinese believe in quantity, they they backstabbed us in 1962 with 8:1 ratio...

But in this modern era it won't work.

Why cant the Indians read and understand basic news facts>?
 
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