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China

China’s powerful new space camera for ‘civilian use’ launched into high orbit

Mainland authorities place satellite in geostationary orbit in unusual step for imaging tools

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A Long March-3B carrier rocket is launched with the Gaofen-4 Satellite in western China. Photo: Xinhua
Stephen Chenin Beijing

China has put a camera into space which it claims could snap a picture of an area the size of Greece at in the clearest resolution of any similar imaging device in high orbit.

The camera was mounted on a satellite launched from the Xichang Satellite Launch Centre in western China on Tuesday morning.

China’s space agency said the camera was for civilian use to monitor the earth. It will help with missions such as monitoring the weather and forest fires.

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Most observation satellites are placed in orbit a few hundred kilometres above the planet, but the Gaofen-4 satellite, the latest in China’s global high-definition monitoring network, operates at 36,000km above sea level.

READ MORE: Nuclear space race picks up pace: China unveils rocket capable of firing 20 nukes to defeat US missile shield

The European Space Agency conducted research in 2010 on the feasibility of sending an observation satellite to high altitude orbit, but thought it impossible to spot an object smaller than 1km in length with the existing technology.

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