China sent a new Beidou navigation satellite into the orbit on a Long March-3A rocket from the Xichang Satellite Launch Centre, in the southwestern province of Sichuan, at 4:58 a.m. on Tuesday.. The satellite is the 32nd of the Beidou navigation system, and one of the Beidou-2 family, which is the second generation of the system, Xinhua news agency reported.
The launch was the 280th mission of the Long March rocket series. China started to construct the third-generation of Beidou system in 2017, and eight Beidou-3 satellites are now in space. So why launch another Beidou-2 satellite? “The launch of a backup Beidou-2 satellite will ensure the system’s continuous and stable operation,” said Yang Hui, chief designer of the Beidou-2 series.
By 2020, the value of China’s satellite navigation business is expected to surpass 400 billion yuan (about 58 billion U.S. dollars), of which 240 billion to 320 billion yuan will go to the Beidou system, Ran said.
Named after the Chinese term for the Big Dipper constellation, Beidou aims to rival the US GPS system, Russia’s GLONASS and the European Union’s Galileo as a global satellite navigation system.
The project was formally launched in 1994. It began serving China in 2000 and the Asia-Pacific region in 2012.
Watch the Launching Video
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Since then, the system has provided reliable and free, all-weather and all-time positioning, navigation and timing services to customers in the Asia-Pacific region and has never been out of service, according to the China Academy of Space Technology.
However, some of the Beidou-2 satellites are nearing the end of their lives and need to be replaced by backup satellites. China launched two backup satellites on March 30 and June 12, 2016.
This new backup is not a simple repeat of previous satellites, but has been upgraded to improve its reliability, said Yang. It carries a rubidium clock, which is the key to the accuracy of its positioning and timing.