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TAIYUAN, July 25 (Xinhuanet) -- Probe No. 2, the
second satellite of a Sino-European joint space probe program, known as the
Double Star Project, was successfully launched at the Taiyuan Satellite
Launching Center, in north China, at 15:05 p.m. Sunday.
The polar orbiting satellite entered into the preset
orbit 30 minutes after the launching, with a perigee of 681 kilometers, an
apogee of 38,278 kilometers, and a gradient of 90 degrees, according to the
Xi'an Satellite Monitoring and Control Center, innorthwest China.
The Probe No. 2 and the Probe No. 1, which went up
into the orbit on December 30, 2003, will form an innovative, constellation-like
and independent probing system. The duo are expected to operate in space areas
that have not been covered by other international satellites, so far.
The Double Star Project is sponsored by the Chinese
Academy of Sciences in collaboration of the European Space Agency (ESA).
The Double Star Project and a four-satellite program
of the ESA will form a six-point space probe network, which will be the first of
its kind in the world. China and the ESA will share the results of the space
research network.
The Probe No. 2, with a similar structure of the
Probe No. 1, is 343 kilometers in weight and has an endurance of 12 months.
As same as the Probe No. 1, the launching of the
Probe No. 2 was also accomplished by a Long March 2C/SM rocket carrier.
It is the 77th launching of the Long March rocket
carriers and the 35th successful projection of the Long March rocket carriers in
succession since October 1996.
Li Tieying, vice chairman of the Standing Committee
of the National People's Congress, the top legislature, and Li Jinai, member of
the Central Military Commission and director of the General Armament Department
of the Chinese People's Liberation Army (PLA), observed the event on the spot.
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