China launched a new
geostationary weather satellite early Tuesday, marking the country's 11th
successful space launch of the year and setting a new record for Chinese space
activity.
The Feng Yun 2E satellite blasted
off aboard a Long March 3A rocket at 0054 GMT (8:54 a.m. local time) from
the Xichang launch center in southwestern China's Sichuan province.
The 172-foot-tall launcher
flew east from Xichang and deployed the 3,064-pound spacecraft about 24 minutes
after liftoff, according to the state-owned Xinhua news agency.
Feng Yun 2E will join a
fleet of geostationary weather satellites operated by the China Meteorological
Administration. The spacecraft will collect real-time weather imagery for
forecasters in China and neighboring countries.
The new satellite will
replace Feng Yun 2C, which was launched in 2004 and is stationed along the
equator at 105 degrees east longitude.
China also operates a
constellation of weather satellites in polar orbit. A new craft was added to
that group during a launch earlier this year.
Tuesday's mission was the
11th Chinese space launch of the year, breaking the country's previous record
number of launches set last year.
The launch also pushed
China past the 10
successful orbital flights conducted by U.S. expendable launch vehicles in
2008. Those missions were flown by Delta 2, Atlas 5, Pegasus and Falcon
1 rockets.
Long March rockets have
completed 115 launches since China orbited its first satellite in 1970, Xinhua
reported.
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