Issue 102

China Launches Yaogan-43 01 Satellites

16 Aug: China launched a Long March-4B with the first group of Yaogan-43 remote sensing satellites (YG-43 01) from Xichang. Official sources stated the satellites entered the preset orbit and will be “mainly used for carrying out tests on new technologies of low-orbit constellations”. Launch Video . - This was the…

16 Aug: China launched a Long March-4B with the first group of Yaogan-43 remote sensing satellites (YG-43 01) from Xichang. Official sources stated the satellites entered the preset orbit and will be “mainly used for carrying out tests on new technologies of low-orbit constellations”. Launch Video.

– This was the first LM-4B launch with a 4.2m fairing (typical is 3.7m.)

Initial observations indicate there are 9 satellites and 1 upperstage/rocket body on orbit. There are currently only 8 satellites in the spacetrack.org catalog and all are in a ~503x495km orbit with an inclination of 35°. As of 17 Aug the satellites were not in any discernable formation.

– We will likely see another satellite added to the catalog in the near future.The mission patch displays 9 stars and the launch video displays an animation showing 2 rows of 4 satellites with another satellite on top. (4×2)+1 = 9.

– YG-43 01’s orbital profile is nearly identical to the 47 YG-35/36/39/42 satellites that China launched over the past 3 years. However, due to a RAAN offset, the YG-43 01 cluster is not co-planar with any of the previously launched YG-35/36/39/42 spacecraft.

From 2017-21 China also launched 30 YG-30 satellites into a 35° inclined orbit and at 585x580km altitude. The YG-43 01 cluster is not co-planar with any of these satellites.

– Open source reports indicate CAST, SAST, IAM CAS, and MonoSpace contributed to YG-43 01. We do not know if this refers to individual satellites or components or a mixture of both. Minospace and IAMCAS specialize in small, networked satellites.


China: An Update on the YG-35/36/39/42 Constellation

Orbital Plane #4

– YG-35 04 (53524/53526/53522): Trail2 has regained most of SMA and is now 492.5km but not close to being in formation. Trail2 recently started to drop altitude (see graph), may attempt to close gap with Trail1. Lead is ~6min 24sec ahead of Trail1 and Trail1 is ~40min 23sec ahead of Trail2.

– YG-36 05 (57456/57454/57452): In formation, Lead ~4min 34sec ahead of Trail1 and Trail1 ~1min 56sec ahead of Trail2. No RAAN offset.


Orbital Plane #5

– YG-35 05 (53761/53763/53760): Trail2 satellite SMA now just 2km (493km) below normal but still way out of formation. Trail2 recently started to drop altitude, may attempt to close gap with Trail1. Lead is ~5min 16sec ahead of Trail1 and Trail1 is ~36min 41sec ahead of Trail2.

– YG-36 03 (54372/54374/54376): Trail2 satellite SMA now just 2km (493km) below normal but still way out of formation. Trail2 recently started to drop altitude, may attempt to close gap with Trail1. Lead is ~5min 17sec ahead of Trail1 and Trail1 is ~36min 39sec ahead of Trail2.

– YG-39 04 (58145/58143/58141): In formation, Lead ~2min 59sec ahead of Trail1 and Trail1 ~2min 19sec ahead of Trail2. No RAAN offset.