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China launches four satellites, establishing wheel-pattern

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China launched four interferometric synthetic aperture radar (InSAR) satellites of its PIESAT-1 constellation via a Long March-2D rocket to provide commercial remote sensing data services at the Taiyuan Satellite Launch Center.

The four satellites of this mission, composed of a master satellite and three assistant satellites, are the X-band InSAR Earth imaging system in four-satellite formation. The master satellite weighs about 320 kilograms, while a single assistant satellite weighs about 270 kilograms, according to GalaxySpace, the developer of the satellites.

These satellites in orbit also constitute the first wheel-pattern satellite formation in the world, with the master satellite located in the middle and the three assistant satellites evenly distributed on the wheel hub. The formation uses inter-satellite communication links and phase synchronization links to enable precise orbit control, so as to ensure its stability and spatial safety.

GalaxySpace said the wheel-pattern formation has the advantages of relatively stable formation configuration, multiple interference baselines and high mapping efficiency, compared with traditional interferometric satellite systems.

These satellites are competent in mapping global non-polar regions at a scale of 1:50000, which can achieve the high-precision mapping of global continents rapidly and efficiently, the company said.