Nov. 22
China successfully launched the Tianlian I-04 satellite on
Tuesday from the Xichang Satellite Launch Center in southwest
China's Sichuan Province.
The satellite was launched on a Long March-3C carrier rocket at
11:24 p.m. Beijing time, said sources with the center.
Developed by the China Academy of Space Technology under the
China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation, the satellite
will join its three predecessors to achieve global network
operation.
The network is expected to provide data relay, measurement and
control services for China's manned spacecraft, space labs and space
stations, according to the center.
The network will also offer data relay services for the country's
medium- and low-Earth orbiting resources satellites, as well as
measurement and control support for spacecraft launches.
China launched its first data relay satellite, the Tianlian I-01,
in April 2008. The second satellite was launched in July 2011, and
the third was launched in July 2012.
The launch of the Tianlian I-04 marked the 241st mission of
China's Long March series of rockets.
Since China's first experimental communications satellite was
launched in the Xichang Satellite Launch Center in 1984, the center
has sent more than 100 spacecraft into space in recent decades,
including over 20 BeiDou navigation satellites and the country's
first lunar probe, Chang'e-1.