Tianlian Explained

Tianlian
Country:China
Bus:
  • DFH-3 - first generation
  • DFH-4 - second generation
Applications:Tracking and Data Relay Satellite System
Orbits:Geostationary
Operator:China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation (CASC)
Manufacturer:China Academy of Space Technology (CAST)
Status:In service
Launched:8
Operational:8
First:Tianlian I-01
25 April 2008
Last:Tianlian II-03
12 July 2022

Tianlian (Simplified Chinese: 天链, Traditional Chinese: 天鏈, English: Sky Link) also known as CTDRS, is a Chinese data relay communication satellite constellation. The constellation serves to relay data from ground stations to spacecraft and rockets, most significantly China's crewed spaceflight program. The system currently consists of seven satellites in two generations, with the first satellite being launched in 2008.

Mission

Tianlian is used to provide real-time communications between orbiting satellites and ground control stations. The Chinese tracking and data relay satellites were developed by the China Academy of Space Technology (CAST) and it is similar to the American Tracking and Data Relay Satellite System (TDRSS) in concept. The system is designed to support near-real-time communications between orbiting spacecraft and ground control, as well as complement the ground-based space tracking and telemetry stations and ships in tracking spacecraft.[1] This is necessary because ground stations can only maintain contact with a satellite while it is overhead. Positioning multiple satellites in geostationary orbit ensures that the ground station and satellite are both always in view of at least one relay satellite, allowing for constant communication between the ground station and target satellite. The system provides data relay services for crewed Shenzhou missions, from Shenzhou 7 onwards, the Tiangong space station, and interplanetary missions.[2] [3] [4] All satellites were launched from the Xichang Satellite Launch Center and operate in geostationary orbit.[5] [6] [7] [8]

Tianlian I

Tianlian I consists of five satellites, all based on the DFH-3 satellite bus. The first satellite of the series, Tianlian I-01, was launched on the maiden flight of the Long March 3C launch vehicle on 25 April 2008.[9] [10] With the launch of Tianlian I-03, a spacecraft could be tracked for 70% of its orbit, compared to only 15% without the constellation.[11]

Tianlian II

Tianlian II is the second generation of the constellation and currently consists of 3 satellites based on the DFH-4 satellite bus. The second generation system greatly improves data transmission rates and its multi-targeting ability. This in turn improves spacecraft operational safety and flexibility.[12] [13]

Satellites

!Satellite!Simplified Chinese Name!Launch (UTC)[14] !Carrier Rocket!Launch Site!Bus!Longitude[15] !Status!COSPAR ID!SATCAT no.
First Generation
Tianlian I-01天链一号01星25 April 2008, 15:35Long March 3CXSLC LC-2DFH-377.0° EastActive2008-019A32779
Tianlian I-02天链一号02星11 July 2011, 15:41Long March 3CXSLC LC-2DFH-3176.72° EastActive2011-032A37737
Tianlian I-03天链一号03星25 July 2012, 15:43Long March 3CXSLC LC-2DFH-316.86° EastActive2012-040A38730
Tianlian I-04天链一号04星22 November 2016, 15:24Long March 3CXSLC LC-2DFH-376.95° EastActive2016-072A41869
Tianlian I-05天链一号05星6 July 2021, 15:53Long March 3CXSLC LC-2DFH-3106.2653° EastActive2021-063A49011
Second Generation
Tianlian II-01天链二号01星31 March 2019, 15:51Long March 3BXSLC LC-3DFH-479.9° EastActive2019-017A44076
Tianlian II-02天链二号02星13 December 2021, 16:09Long March 3BXSLC LC-3DFH-4171.04° EastActive2021-124A50005
Tianlian II-03天链二号03星12 July 2022, 16:30Long March 3BXSLC LC-2DFH-4Active2022-078A53100

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Display: Tianlian 2-01 2019-017A. 2020-11-16. nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov. NASA.
  2. Web site: 24 June 2021. China's relay satellites facilitate clear, smooth space-ground communication. 29 June 2021. Xinhua News Agency.
  3. Web site: Stephen Clark. 2008-04-25. Chinese data relay spacecraft put into orbit. 2008-04-26. Spaceflight Now.
  4. News: Li. Guoli. Wang. Ran. 2020-07-21. 我国天基测控系统团队完成多项技术状态准备静待天问一号发射. zh. Xinhua News Agency. 23 June 2021.
  5. Web site: David Todd. 2012-07-26. Chinese data relay satellite TianLian-1C is launched successfully on a Long March 3C. 2012-08-17. Flightglobal.
  6. Web site: 14 May 2020. Display: Tianlian 1-02 2011-032A. 11 December 2020. NASA.
  7. Web site: 14 May 2020. Display: Tianlian 1-03 2012-040A. 11 December 2020. NASA.
  8. Web site: 14 May 2020. Display: Tianlian 1-04 2016-072A. 11 December 2020. NASA.
  9. Web site: Yan Liang. 2008-04-25. China blasts off first data relay satellite. 2008-04-26. Xinhua. 29 April 2008. https://web.archive.org/web/20080429170953/http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2008-04/26/content_8052455.htm. dead.
  10. http://china.rednet.cn/c/2008/04/26/1493822.htm 我国成功发射首颗数据中继卫星(组图)
  11. Web site: Xin Dingding. 2012-07-27. Satellite launch completes network. 2012-08-17. China Daily.
  12. Web site: 中国成功发射"天链二号01星"-中新网. 2020-11-16. chinanews.com.
  13. News: China successfully launches second generation data relay satellite. The Economic Times. 2020-11-16.
  14. Web site: McDowell. Jonathan. Launch Log. 11 December 2020. Jonathan's Space Report.
  15. Web site: 1 January 2021. Union of Concerned Scientists Satellite Database. 8 July 2021. UCS.