BEIJING, April 20 (Xinhua) -- China's ocean
monitoring satellite, "Haiyang-1B" (Ocean 1B), is functioning well and data
transit tests have been successfully carried out, the state oceanic authority
said on Friday.
The China-made satellite, which monitors the color
and temperature of the ocean, went into the orbit on April 11 aboard a Long
March-2C carrier rocket.
The data collection center in Beijing received the
first batch of signals from the satellite on Friday morning. "The satellite is
in good condition and working well," said Jiang Xingwei, director of the
National Satellite Ocean Application Service.
The satellite will roam over the Sea of Japan, the
Yellow Sea, the East China Sea, the Taiwan Strait, the South China Sea and emit
signals when it passes over Beijing and Sanya, the coastal city of southern
Hainan province.
Jiang said the State Oceanic Administration has sent
a team to the South China Sea to carry out a simultaneous field survey over the
next 40 days to check the reliability of satellite data.
"Haiyang-1B", an upgraded version of the earlier
model "Haiyang-1A", provides three times as much information. Its observational
range is 3,000 kilometers.
Oceanic officials say the satellite will be used to
survey oceanic resources and develop coastal areas, help with port construction
and monitor and prevent oceanic pollution, and also to study global
environmental changes.