Issue 129

China Launches YG-45 into Medium Earth Orbit

9 Sep 2025: China launched a Long March-7A with the Yaogan-45 (65563) satellite from Wenchang. Official sources noted the satellite entered the planned orbit and “will be mainly used for scientific experiments, land resource surveys, crop yield estimates, and disaster prevention and relief work”. This mission…

9 Sep 2025: China launched a Long March-7A with the Yaogan-45 (65563) satellite from Wenchang. Official sources noted the satellite entered the planned orbit and “will be mainly used for scientific experiments, land resource surveys, crop yield estimates, and disaster prevention and relief work”. This mission description matches those provided by other Yaogan satellites with Earth observation (imagery) missions. YG-45’s orbit is an unusual one in that it is much higher than is typical for Earth Observation satellites, ~7,500km, and is in Medium Earth Orbit (MEO). YG-45 is the first Yaogan satellite in MEO and I believe the first Chinese non-Beidou satellite in MEO. Launch Video.

– As of 14 Sep the 18 Space Defense Squadron (SDS) has collected only one observation of YG-45. With this information the satellite appears to be in a 7,500km orbit with an inclination of 20.0°.

  • Per Johnathan McDowell tweet on 13 Sep 2025, “Lack of US tracking updates for Yaogan 45 for past 4 days suggests it circularized its orbit at 7500 km on Sep 9/10.”
  • Low Earth Orbit extends to 2,000km, Medium Earth Orbit covers 2,000 – 35,786km, GEO is 35,786km.

-China’s use of the LM-7A likely indicates YG-45 is a large satellite.

  • Per official Chinese news sources: “This marks the Long March 7A’s first medium-orbit launch mission. By strengthening the core-stage tank structure and increasing the number of core-stage engine starts, the design team has increased the Long March 7A’s medium-orbit payload capacity from 7 tons to over 8 tons, enhancing the rocket’s mission adaptability.”
    • Based on this statement it is likely YG-45 has a mass in excess of 8,000kg.
  • YG-45 is not the first imagery satellite China has placed beyond LEO. While it is the first in MEO, China operates the following imagery satellites in GEO (36,000km above the equator): Gaofen-4 (2015/41194) estimated resolution 50m, Gaofen-13 01 (2020/46610) estimated resolution 15m, Gaofen-13 02 (2023/55912) estimated resolution 15m and Yaogan-41 (2023/58582) estimated resolution 5m. China also operates the Ludi Tance-4 01 (2023/57624), the world’s first and only GEO-based Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) imager.
  • Editor’s Note: The launch patch suggests a SAR imager with the collection pattern emanating from either side of the central star. This is pure speculation on my part.