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KUNMING, April 3 (Xinhua) -- Chinese scientists on Monday completed the main
part of a high-tech radio telescope which will serve China's ambitious moon-probe
project scheduled for launch in 2007.
The 45-meter tall telescope weighs 400 tons and measures 40 meters in
diameter of the antenna. It's located in southwest China's Yunnan Province and
is the country's second largest radio telescope. The largest is being built in
Beijing.
According to Li Yan, director of Yunnan Observatory of Chinese Academy of Sciences,
together with two radio telescopes already set up in Shanghai and northwest
China's Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, China now has four large
radio telescopes which are 2,000 to 3,000 kilometers apart from each other.
The telescopes will form a comprehensive earth-based research and survey network
that will be able to detect, track and retrieve data sent back from
China's first moon-orbiting satellite, Li said.
Located on top of the 2000-meter-tall Mountain Phoenix in an eastern suburb
of Kunming, capital city of Yunnan Province, the newest radio telescope is
"superbly well positioned", the scientist said.
The construction of the telescope started in August last year and will be
completely installed and tested by June. Enditem |