China has moved a step
closer to completing its own navigation and positioning satellite
network with the launch of two more navigation satellites.
To have global coverage, the country eventually aims to have 35 satellites in orbit by 2020.
China hopes that Beidou will wean it off the US Global Positioning System.
Just like GPS, the Chinese system is designed to let users determine their positions to within a few meters.
Beidou, also known as Compass, has been developed for both military and civilian uses.
The two satellites went up on Monday morning from the Xichang Satellite Launch Centre in southwest Sichuan province.
They were carried on a Long March-3B rocket, according to the state-run Xinhua news agency.
"The two satellites will help improve the accuracy of the Beidou, or Compass system," Xichang Satellite Launch Centre said in a statement carried by the agency.
- Sat-nav systems determine a position by measuring the distances to a number of known locations - the spacecraft constellation in orbit
- In practice, a sat-nav receiver will capture atomic-clock time signals sent from the satellites and convert them into the respective distances
- A sat-nav device will use the data sent from at least four satellites to get the very best estimate of its position - whether on the ground or in the sky
- The whole system is monitored from the ground to ensure satellite clocks do not drift and give out timings that might mislead the user
Now partially operational,
Beidou makes China only the third country in the world, after the US and
Russia, to have its own navigation system.
According to the Russian Space Agency, Roscosmos, Russia plans to spend $694m (£427m) on its Glonass system this year.
At a recent annual Satellite Navigation Forum in Moscow, Russia's deputy prime minister Vladislav Surkov said that more than 300 billion roubles (£6bn, $10.2bn) have been budgeted to further develop Glonass and bring 30 satellites into operation by 2020.
Europe has also been building a navigation system, called Galileo, which has two satellites in orbit, launched in October last year. The next two are scheduled to follow later this year.
The space project of the European Commission, the EU's executive arm, plans to have all 26 Galileo satellites in orbit by the end of 2015. - BBC Newscribe : get free news in real time
China has successfully launched a pair of navigation satellites. The launch took place on Sunday Morning from Xichang Satellite Launch Center and marks the first time the Long March 3B launch vehicle has been used for this kind of mission.
The Compass Navigation Satellite System is China’s second-generation satellite navigation system, capable of providing continuous, real-time passive 3D geo-spatial positioning and speed measurement.
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