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China Space Military:Recon, Satcom, Navi, ASAT/BMD, Orbital Vehicle, SLV, etc.

Chinese scientists capture nighttime remote sensing imagery
Source: Xinhua| 2019-01-23 20:34:58|Editor: Yurou

WUHAN, Jan. 23 (Xinhua) -- Chinese scientists have released nighttime remote sensing imagery capturing finer spatial details of artificial nighttime light in China.

The imagery is made up of 275 photos taken from June to December in 2018 across China. It is made by Wuhan University and Hubei high-resolution earth observation statistics and application center in central China's Hubei Province.

The details of artificial light captured on the imagery can reveal human activities at night. Activities including oil or natural gas burning, forest fires and volcano eruptions are also captured.

Luojia-1, a scientific experiment satellite, was sent into space on June 2 last year. Its spatial resolution reaches 130 meters.

So far, nighttime remote sensing data collected by Luojia-1 have been provided to over 3,000 users in 16 countries and regions.

Compared with ground-based measurements, nighttime light remote sensing is able to acquire larger-scale and higher quantities of artificial lighting data.

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Scientist wins China's top award
Yao Minji
22:17 UTC+8, 2019-01-27

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Zhao Yuanfu was honored the State Technological Invention Award earlier this month in Beijing.

China’s Beidou Navigation Satellite System (BDS) has recently started providing global services. However, few people in the country have ever heard of Zhao Yuanfu, the man behind homegrown aerospace integrated circuits.

Earlier this month, Zhao won the State Technological Invention Award, China’s top science honor, for his contributions in made-in-China aerospace integrated circuits, among other achievements.

By the end of 2018, 33 BDS satellites have been operating in orbit, while another 12 will be launched in the next two years. China has been building the system since the 1990s, at first using imported parts. Top scientists like Zhao have since then been working on developing China’s own aerospace technology.

Zhao, 56, who heads the Beijing Microelectronics Research Institute of the China Academy of Aerospace Electronics Technology, has led his team for years to make the first made-in-China radiation-hardening integrated circuits.

In July 2015, BDS launched two new-generation satellites, the first one equipped with aerospace circuits designed and made in China.

To cope with radiation in the space, the integrated circuits require extra protection against cosmic rays to work longer and more stably.

Zhao has made the radiation-hardening technique part of the design rather than part of the manufacturing process as previously done. This has gained him countless state and regional science awards, 56 patents and more than 230 products.

They are not only used widely in China’s own Beidou satellites and space stations, but also exported to Russia, France, Germany and Switzerland, among other countries.

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Zhao Yuanfu’s inventions have been widely used in China’s aerospace projects since 2015, when two satellites equipped with indigenous integrated circuits were launched for Beidou Navigation Satellite System.

Source: SHINE Editor: Liu Qi
 
Hello guys, is this a general thread for Chinese Space Program? if not please guide me to one...

I would love to showcase here some of my old newspaper (from India) clippings of early Shenzhou mission.

please visit for more...View attachment 535591 https://www.chetansindiaspaceflight.com/2019/01/space-history-old-newspaper-clips-early_22.html
Wow, didn't know Indian local media covered this so extensively. But it's in local language, abit hard for us to understand.
 
PLA welcomes launches of private rockets
By Zhao Lei | China Daily | Updated: 2019-02-18 07:32
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The privately-owned tech company i-Space uses its own carrier rocket to launch three satellites into space from the Gobi Desert in Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center in northwestern China on Sept 5, 2018. [Photo by Chen Xiao/chinadaily.com.cn]

The People's Liberation Army has opened one of its space launch facilities to private rocket companies in China, a major step in its efforts to implement President Xi Jinping's civil-military integration strategy.

The Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center, China's primary launch facility in the northwestern Gobi Desert, has hosted the launches of three privately built rockets since early September, when it first opened its doors to private enterprises. Officials at the center say it plans to support more private rocket missions.

Ji Duo, the center's Party chief, told Xinhua News Agency recently that carrying out launches of privately made rockets is what a world-class space center is supposed to do, and Jiuquan is willing to put privately funded missions on its launch agenda.

Jia Lide, planning chief at the launch center, said favorable policies and targeted measures have been created for the benefit of private space enterprises. The center has also set up a dedicated support system for such activities.

Xi, who is also chairman of the Central Military Commission, has repeatedly urged China's space industry to take the lead in the implementation of the civil-military integration strategy.

During his meetings in recent years at annual sessions of the National People's Congress with deputies from the PLA, the president asked them to fully understand and promote the strategy.

Xi ordered military personnel to be open-minded and share their research and development resources with others. Closed-door research and monopolies must be torn down to optimize the use of resources and stimulate innovation and public interest in defense technology, he said.

Civil-military integration has been listed as a national strategy and a priority on the government's agenda since Xi was elected the Party's top leader in 2012. It usually refers to military and defense industries transferring technologies to the civilian sector, and including private companies on the military's list of suppliers.

Three Beijing-based private space startups-OneSpace, i-Space and LandSpace-each launched a rocket from the Jiuquan center last year.

Both LandSpace and i-Space plan to launch at least one carrier rocket from the center this year.

China expects to launch at least 37 rockets this year, more than any other country. It led the world in launching rockets into orbit for the first time last year.
 
Satellite mission marks 300th launch of Long March rocket
By Zhao Lei | chinadaily.com.cn | Updated: 2019-03-10 02:38

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The "ChinaSat 6C" satellite is launched by a Long March-3B carrier rocket from the Xichang Satellite Launch Center in southwest China's Sichuan Province, March 10, 2019. It will provide high-quality radio and TV transmission services. [Photo/Xinhua]

China lifted into space a Long March 3B carrier rocket early Sunday morning to place a communications satellite into a geostationary orbit, marking the 300th launch in the Long March family.

The 19-story-tall rocket blasted off at 0:28 am at the Xichang Satellite Launch Center in Southwest China’s Sichuan province, ripping apart the night sky with its orange-red flame and echoing thunder, a video published by China Aerospace Science and Technology Corp in Beijing, maker of the Long March series, showed.

The mission was announced as a success about one hour after liftoff as the satellite’s solar arrays unfolded in orbit, according to the State-owned space conglomerate.

China launched its first carrier rocket – a Long March 1 that was a de facto modified ballistic missile –in April 1970 to send its first satellite, Dongfanghong 1, or East Red 1, into space.

Since then, the country has developed and built 17 types of Long March rocket; five of them have retired. The Long March family has comprised nearly 97 percent of the nation’s total launch missions, leaving a very small proportion to other series, such as the Kuaizhou.
 
Satellite mission marks 300th launch of Long March rocket
By Zhao Lei | chinadaily.com.cn | Updated: 2019-03-10 02:38

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The "ChinaSat 6C" satellite is launched by a Long March-3B carrier rocket from the Xichang Satellite Launch Center in southwest China's Sichuan Province, March 10, 2019. It will provide high-quality radio and TV transmission services. [Photo/Xinhua]

China lifted into space a Long March 3B carrier rocket early Sunday morning to place a communications satellite into a geostationary orbit, marking the 300th launch in the Long March family.

The 19-story-tall rocket blasted off at 0:28 am at the Xichang Satellite Launch Center in Southwest China’s Sichuan province, ripping apart the night sky with its orange-red flame and echoing thunder, a video published by China Aerospace Science and Technology Corp in Beijing, maker of the Long March series, showed.

The mission was announced as a success about one hour after liftoff as the satellite’s solar arrays unfolded in orbit, according to the State-owned space conglomerate.

China launched its first carrier rocket – a Long March 1 that was a de facto modified ballistic missile –in April 1970 to send its first satellite, Dongfanghong 1, or East Red 1, into space.

Since then, the country has developed and built 17 types of Long March rocket; five of them have retired. The Long March family has comprised nearly 97 percent of the nation’s total launch missions, leaving a very small proportion to other series, such as the Kuaizhou.
China's Long March family of space launchers, designed by the CASC Group, will make its 300th launch this month [that's done on 2019.03.10 early morning BJT].

It took 37 years to achieve its first 100 launches, 7 years more for the next 100, and now in just 4 years we are in the 300th.


Henri Kenhmann (East Pendulum) tweeted on 09 March 2019:


Such simple yet meticulously maintained stats clearly explain the science and technology status of the China today in general, and its aerospace progresses in particular! :china:

I do believe with DATA and FACTS!!

//UPDATE//
It happens that the original launch statistics indeed came from the Xinhua's following article:

China Focus: China's Long March rockets complete 300 launches (2019-03-10)

“It took 37 years for the Long March rockets to complete the first 100 launches, 7.5 years to complete the second 100 launches, and only about four years to accomplish the final 100, with the average number of launches per year increasing from 2.7 to 13.3 and then to 23.5.”
(… )

http://www.xinhuanet.com/english/2019-03/10/c_137883742.htm
 
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Smart tractor with BeiDou navigation system successfully tested in Tunisia
Source: Xinhua| 2019-03-11 04:44:05|Editor: yan

TUNIS, March 10 (Xinhua) -- A self-driving tractor with application of BeiDou Navigation Satellite System (BDS) was tested successfully Sunday in northwestern Tunisia.

The representatives of China-Arab BDS/GNSS center and the Arab Information and Communication Technologies Organization (AICTO), as well as the academic staff of an engineering school in Mjez El-Beb region in northwestern Tunisia, attended the test ceremony.

This smart tractor, used in various agricultural activities, was equipped with a BDS, so that it can be controlled remotely without a driver.

"I am very impressed and surprised by the quality of the equipment offered by BeiDou," said Sami Trimech, the strategic planning and development director at AICTO.

"We had a dream to bring BeiDou to the Arab countries," said Nour Laabidi, the project manager at AICTO and head of China-Arab BDS/GNSS center in Tunisia.

"This is a pilot project. We are happy to implement it in our country and I hope that all Arab countries will be able to use this Chinese technology," said Laabidi.

Hassan Kherroubi, a specialist in the mechanical industry at the Mjez El-Beb engineering school, stressed the contribution of this Chinese technology to the agricultural sector in Tunisia.

According to Kherroubi, a series of agricultural activities, including the harvest, will be more profitable and more effective with such technologies.

"Our main concern is to benefit all Arab and African countries of this fruitful cooperation between Tunisia and China," Kherroubi said, adding that this advanced technology will bring a bright future to the region.

BDS is compatible with other navigation systems, such as GPS, and users can receive services from both systems at the same time, improving positioning accuracy.
 
China Focus: China's Long March rockets complete 300 launches (2019-03-10)

XICHANG, March 10 (Xinhua) -- With a Long March-3B rocket putting a new communication satellite into orbit on Sunday, China's Long March carrier rocket series completed 300 launches, having sent more than 500 spacecraft into space since 1970.

"This is a milestone for China's space industry development," said Wu Yansheng, board chairman of the China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation (CASC).

The Long March carrier rocket series, developed by CASC, is responsible for about 96.4 percent of all the launch missions in China.

It took 37 years for the Long March rockets to complete the first 100 launches, 7.5 years to complete the second 100 launches, and only about four years to accomplish the final 100, with the average number of launches per year increasing from 2.7 to 13.3 and then to 23.5.

"Intensive launches have become normal in China, indicating the rapid development of the space industry, the progress of science and technology and the enhancement of national strength," said Shang Zhi, director of the Space Department of the CASC.

China joined the space club on April 24, 1970, when the Long March-1 carrier rocket launched the country's first satellite, Dongfanghong-1, into orbit. At that time, the carrying capacity of the Long March rocket was only 300 kg.

On November 3, 2016, China's current largest carrier rocket, the Long March-5, made its maiden flight, with its carrying capacity reaching 25 tonnes for low-Earth orbit and 14 tonnes for geosynchronous orbit.

The success rate of the 300 launches of the Long March rockets stood at 96 percent, according to CASC.

During the third 100 launches, the Long March rockets sent a total of 225 spacecraft, weighing about 240 tonnes, into space, with a success rate of 97 percent, reaching a high level in the world, said Shang.

From October 1996 to August 2011, the Long March rockets set a world record for 15 years of successful consecutive launches.

In 2018, the Long March rockets completed 37 consecutive successful launches, ranking a global first for the highest number of successful launches.

A total of 17 types of Long March carrier rockets have been developed and put into use since 1970, ensuring the implementation of a series of key space projects including manned space program, lunar exploration, BeiDou Navigation Satellite System (BDS) and the Gaofen Earth observation project.

In addition, the Long March carrier rockets also launched a large number of meteorological satellites, resource satellites and oceanographic satellites, as well as several innovative science satellites including DAMPE to search for dark matter, the world's first quantum satellite, and an electromagnetic satellite to study earthquakes, playing an important role in promoting the economic, social and scientific development in China.

Since the 1990s, the Long March rockets have been designed to be compatible with satellites manufactured in the United States, Europe and other countries and regions.

So far, Chinese rockets have launched 56 international commercial satellites and carried more than 20 small satellites or payloads into space for international customers.

The Long March carrier rockets helped provide launch services for countries participating in the Belt and Road Initiative, including Algeria, Pakistan and Saudi Arabia. The services have been extended from launching satellites to the construction of ground facilities, and management and application of the satellites.

From 2015 to 2016, four types of new generation Long March carrier rockets, using non-toxic and non-polluting propellants, were put into use, greatly improving China's capacity of entering outer space.

New technologies such as 3D printing and intelligent manufacturing have been introduced in the development of China's new generation carrier rockets.

For instance, the Long March-7 is China's first carrier rocket completely designed using digital and virtual reality technology -- no paper blueprint was used throughout the design and production process.

The management and production efficiency of the launching vehicles have also been improved. China is now capable of manufacturing more than 40 carrier rockets every year.

The new generation rocket Long March-6 does not require a fixed launch pad and can be ready for takeoff within seven days. The preparation time to launch a Long March-11 rocket can be as short as several hours.

China's achievements in the space industry have benefited from the enhancement of the comprehensive national strength and the upgrading of its basic industrial capacity. On the other hand, the development of the space industry also helps promote the progress of other industries.

For instance, the development of the Long March-5 rocket, which has a diameter of five meters, involved several Chinese industrial enterprises who helped manufacture the propellant tank.

China has made many technological breakthroughs in the development of the Long March-5 rocket, which has also promoted the country's industrial manufacturing capacity.

Technologies gained from developing the "heart" of rockets are helping China, one of the world's major coal consumers, use coal more cleanly and efficiently.

"In China, a large proportion of the grain you eat every day is grown with chemical fertilizers made of materials produced by coal gasification technology transformed from rocket technology," said Zhu Yuying, vice general manager of the Changzheng Engineering Co., Ltd., a company affiliated with the China Academy of Launch Vehicle Technology.

The gasifiers produced by the company can increase the utilization rate of coal from 30 percent to more than 90 percent. And one such gasifier can deal with over 3,000 tonnes of coal every day.

Currently, China is developing new generation medium launch vehicles including the Long March-6A, Long March-7A and Long March-8. A test version of the Long March-5B, which has the largest carrying capacity to low-Earth orbit, has been produced and will be used to launch the modules of China's space station, according to CASC.

China's heavy-lift carrier rocket, the Long March-9, is expected to make its maiden flight around 2030 and will support manned lunar exploration, deep space exploration and construction of a space-based solar power plant.

The diameter of the body of the Long March-9 rocket will be nearly 10 meters. And the manufacturing of the rocket will also push forward the development of new materials, technologies, devices and equipment.

The new generation launch vehicles will gradually replace the old generation carrier rockets, and space transport vehicles will transition from one-time use to reusable in the future, said Shang.

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The Asiasat 1 telecommunications satellite, carried by a Chinese-made Long March 3 carrier rocket, blasts off from the Xichang Satellite Launch Center in Xichang, southwest China's Sichuan Province, on April 7, 1990. With a Long March-3B rocket putting a new communication satellite into orbit on March 10, 2019, China's Long March carrier rocket series completed 300 launches, having sent more than 500 spacecraft into space since 1970. (Xinhua)

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China's newly-developed heavy-lift carrier rocket Long March-5 blasts off from the Wenchang Space Launch Center in Wenchang, south China's Hainan Province, Nov. 3, 2016.

Some more pictures along with captions at below link:
http://www.xinhuanet.com/english/2019-03/10/c_137883742.htm
 
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Satellite mission marks 300th launch of Long March rocket
By Zhao Lei | chinadaily.com.cn | Updated: 2019-03-10 02:38

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The "ChinaSat 6C" satellite is launched by a Long March-3B carrier rocket from the Xichang Satellite Launch Center in southwest China's Sichuan Province, March 10, 2019. It will provide high-quality radio and TV transmission services. [Photo/Xinhua]

China lifted into space a Long March 3B carrier rocket early Sunday morning to place a communications satellite into a geostationary orbit, marking the 300th launch in the Long March family.

The 19-story-tall rocket blasted off at 0:28 am at the Xichang Satellite Launch Center in Southwest China’s Sichuan province, ripping apart the night sky with its orange-red flame and echoing thunder, a video published by China Aerospace Science and Technology Corp in Beijing, maker of the Long March series, showed.

The mission was announced as a success about one hour after liftoff as the satellite’s solar arrays unfolded in orbit, according to the State-owned space conglomerate.

China launched its first carrier rocket – a Long March 1 that was a de facto modified ballistic missile –in April 1970 to send its first satellite, Dongfanghong 1, or East Red 1, into space.

Since then, the country has developed and built 17 types of Long March rocket; five of them have retired. The Long March family has comprised nearly 97 percent of the nation’s total launch missions, leaving a very small proportion to other series, such as the Kuaizhou.
China's Main 4K Ultra HD Video Transmission Satellite Takes Up Station
TANG SHIHUA
DATE : MAR 20 2019/SOURCE : YICAI

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China's Main 4K Ultra HD Video Transmission Satellite Takes Up Station

(Yicai Global) March 20 -- China's Zhongxing-6C satellite has positioned itself at 130 degrees east and is set to become the country's main transmitter of 4K ultra-high-definition video signals.

The orbiter, which launched on March 10, successfully positioned itself on March 17 and is in good operating condition.

Its developer China Satellite Communications, better known as China Satcom, took over its monitoring and control on March 18, state-run China News Service reported.

The satellite will be included in the Beijing-based company's in-orbit management system after completing its in-space tests and will power transmissions of programs for radio and TV stations.

The module will provide adequate high-quality satellite resources for China to develop its 4K and 8K ultra HD businesses, and will become the country's main pillar for their signal transmission, said Shen Yufei, deputy director of China Satcom's Satellite Project Department.

The craft has taken up its station at the meridian which runs from the North Pole down through eastern Russia and China before eventually traversing Australia to intersect with the South Pole.

The 4K ultra HD televisions offer super-detailed pictures featuring rich, accurate colors and high-contrast images at four times the picture resolution of 1080p -- which is 1,920 pixels displayed horizontally and 1,080 pixels vertically, while the p means progressive scan, or non-interlaced, public information shows.

HD TVs have already made inroads into ordinary households in China. The country's first ultra HD TV channel CCTV4K began broadcasting on Oct. 1, public information shows.
 
China's Main 4K Ultra HD Video Transmission Satellite Takes Up Station
TANG SHIHUA
DATE : MAR 20 2019/SOURCE : YICAI

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China's Main 4K Ultra HD Video Transmission Satellite Takes Up Station

(Yicai Global) March 20 -- China's Zhongxing-6C satellite has positioned itself at 130 degrees east and is set to become the country's main transmitter of 4K ultra-high-definition video signals.

The orbiter, which launched on March 10, successfully positioned itself on March 17 and is in good operating condition.

Its developer China Satellite Communications, better known as China Satcom, took over its monitoring and control on March 18, state-run China News Service reported.

The satellite will be included in the Beijing-based company's in-orbit management system after completing its in-space tests and will power transmissions of programs for radio and TV stations.

The module will provide adequate high-quality satellite resources for China to develop its 4K and 8K ultra HD businesses, and will become the country's main pillar for their signal transmission, said Shen Yufei, deputy director of China Satcom's Satellite Project Department.

The craft has taken up its station at the meridian which runs from the North Pole down through eastern Russia and China before eventually traversing Australia to intersect with the South Pole.

The 4K ultra HD televisions offer super-detailed pictures featuring rich, accurate colors and high-contrast images at four times the picture resolution of 1080p -- which is 1,920 pixels displayed horizontally and 1,080 pixels vertically, while the p means progressive scan, or non-interlaced, public information shows.

HD TVs have already made inroads into ordinary households in China. The country's first ultra HD TV channel CCTV4K began broadcasting on Oct. 1, public information shows.
WOW! EXCELLENT! ! ! :cheers: :china:

China has been entering the 4K World in BIG ways. Pretty soon the CHINASAT 6C 中星 6C will be in service, broadcast via satellite to the many parts of the ASIA in 4K.

One just needs to upgrade his TV set to 4K compliant and the new model of satellite receiver supporting the 4K standard, which I believe very soon those makers in Shenzhen will churn out, or perhaps already!

A couple of years back it would be unimaginable to think of watching 4K quality broadcast via satellite receiver… but now it's a REALITY! Thank you China for making it happens :victory: it'll help push the sales of 4K TV sets.

Remember, set the dish to the 130 degrees EAST :enjoy: CHINASAT 6C ... Now CHINASAT has at least three satellites (A-B-C) catering the TV broadcast accessible in many parts of ASIA. But one needs to live at ground to ever have such chance, not live in the vertical housing.
 
15:54, 21-Mar-2019
China delivers two Earth observation satellites
By Gao Yun, Guo Meiping

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Two satellites of China's high-resolution Earth observation system, Gaofen-5 and Gaofen-6, have been put into operation, said the State Administration of Science, Technology and Industry for National Defense and the China National Space Administration (CNSA) on Thursday.

This marks the formation of China's hyperspectral capabilities in Earth observation.

Gaofen-5, launched on May 9, 2018, has the highest spectral resolution of China's remote sensing satellites, and also the world's first full-spectrum hyperspectral satellite for comprehensive observation of atmosphere and land.

It can provide quality and highly reliable hyperspectral data to industries including environmental monitoring, resource exploration, and disaster prevention and mitigation, which is of strategic significance to mastering the autonomy of hyperspectral remote sensing information resources and meeting national needs.

Launched on June 2, 2018, Gaofen-6 is a high-resolution optical satellite able to perform both general and detailed surveys with high flexibility.

The constellation of Gaofen-1 and Gaofen-6 shortens the revisit period of China's land area from four days to two, improving the scale and efficiency of remote sensing data collection and self-sufficiency of data by domestic remote sensing satellites.

During the in-orbit test, the two satellites provided data monitor and control for crop and atmosphere monitoring, and emergency observation services for internal and external disasters including the Daxing'anling forest fire in June 2018 and the tsunami in Indonesia in September 2018.

According to Zhang Kejian, director of CNSA, all tasks of the in-orbit test, including tests of satellite system, ground system and satellite and earth integration index, were completed, and the performance indicators and production precision of the two satellites met the requirements of design and application.

A Gaofen-7 satellite will be launched at the end of the year, Zhang added, and the space-based construction work will be completed. The focus of the Gaofen project will turn to the construction of the application system.

(Cover: Beijing Daxing International Airport (L) and Xiamen city of southeast China's Fujian Province (R) taken by the Gaofen-6 satellite /CNSA Photo)


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Gaofen-5
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Constellation Gaofen-1 and 6


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Satellites capture images of big Chinese projects
New China TV
Published on Mar 22, 2019

Did you know that major Chinese projects can be seen from space? Check out these amazing photos taken by satellites
 
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