A joint mission developed
by China and Brazil was shot into an orbit circling Earth's poles to snap
detailed images of the globe during an early Wednesday launch from China's
northeastern space base.
A Long
March 4B rocket launched with the international satellite at 0326 GMT
Wednesday (11:26 p.m. EDT Tuesday) from the Taiyuan space center in China's
Shanxi province, according to the state-run Xinhua news agency.
The booster's three
liquid-fueled stages accurately deposited the third China-Brazil Earth
Resources Satellite into a Sun-synchronous orbit about 12 minutes after
liftoff.
CBERS 2B was left in a
nearly circular orbit with an average altitude of approximately 462 miles (209
miles), Xinhua reported. The Long March 4B was shooting for an orbital
inclination of 98.5 degrees.
Wednesday's launch marked
the 60th consecutive success for China's Long March rocket fleet. It was also
the 8th space launch for China so far this year.
CBERS 2B will spend the
next few weeks undergoing systems tests and preparations for an operational
mission expected to last at least two years.
The 3,200-pound (1,451-kilogram)
satellite was ordered by Chinese and Brazilian officials in 2004 to bridge the
gap between older spacecraft and next-generation satellites, which should begin
launching in 2009.
The craft's predecessors,
CBERS 1 and CBERS 2, were launched by Chinese rockets in 1999 and 2003,
respectively. Both outlived their baselined two-year missions, according to
Brazil's National Institute for Space Research, a co-sponsor of the program.
The China Academy of Space
Technology was in charge of the Chinese contribution to the mission, Xinhua
reported.
CBERS 2B carries three
primary imaging cameras to take a wide range of pictures of locations scattered
throughout the world.
A low-resolution camera
with a 60-degree field of view will specialize in capturing images of large
swaths of the planet. Another camera will be capable of taking pictures with a
resolution of about 65 feet (213 meters).
Unlike its forerunners,
CBERS 2B includes a high-resolution black-and-white camera able to produce
images showing objects as small as 2.5 meters, or about eight feet. CBERS 1 and
CBERS 2 each carried an infrared scanning instrument instead.
Scientists expect to use
data from the project in environmental monitoring, crop planning and managing
water resources. Images can also be used to identify types of vegetation and in
soil surveys. Pictures could also end up in geography textbooks, according to
Brazilian space officials.
Images from the new
high-resolution camera will also be useful in urban planning and military
intelligence applications for China and Brazil.
China has a 70 percent
stake in the 19-year-old program, while Brazil controls about 30 percent of the
project. Users in both nations have access to the satellite imagery.
Pictures from the
spacecraft have been distributed online since 2004, and more than 15,000 users
have downloaded about 320,000 images since the Internet campaign began,
according to Brazilian officials.
Two more satellites with
four cameras each will be launched in 2009 and 2011. The program extension was
approved in 2002, and China and Brazil will equally split responsibility for
the new project.