Issue 146

China Launches TJS-24

26 May 2026: China launched a Long March-7A with TJS-24 (69235) from Wenchang. According to official sources, the satellite entered the preset orbit successfully and “will be mainly used for verification of multi-band, high-speed satellite communication technologies”.

26 May 2026: China launched a Long March-7A with TJS-24 (69235) from Wenchang. According to official sources, the satellite entered the preset orbit successfully and “will be mainly used for verification of multi-band, high-speed satellite communication technologies”. The satellite is likely heading to GEO and is currently in Geosynchronous Transfer Orbit (GTO). Typically TJS satellites require ~10 days to reach their GEO position (and be reflected in the catalog). Launch Video.

A geosynchronous transfer orbit (GTO) is a highly elliptical Earth orbit used as an intermediate step to place satellites into geosynchronous or geostationary orbit.

  • TJS-24 is currently in a highly elliptical orbit (e=.73) with an apogee of 35,858km (about 100km above GEO) and perigee of only 176.7km.
  • China will adjust TJS-24’s inclination and perigee when the satellite is apogee—where orbital velocity is lowest.
    • While it is perhaps counterintuitive, conducting small prograde (in the direction of travel) ΔV at apogee produces a large perigee raise — doing so adds velocity where it has the greatest geometric leverage on the opposite side of the orbit.
  • GTO uses orbital mechanics to reduce the total delta-v required from the launch vehicle while shifting part of the maneuvering burden to the spacecraft itself.


China has described the missions of the following TJS satellites as “mainly used for verification of multi-band, high-speed satellite communication technologies”: 1) TJS-10; 2) TJS-11; 3) TJS-15; 4) TJS-16; 5) TJS-17; 6) TJS-19; 7) TJS-20; 8) TJS-23; and 9) TJS-24.

We will wait to see where China decides to position TJS-24 in the coming weeks. More updates to follow.

LM-7A Prepares for Lift Off with TJS-24

Launch & Mission Patches

(saberastro.com)

TJS-24 In GTO: Inclination = 19.5° Eccentricity = .73 Apogee = 35,858km Perigee = 176.7km(saberastro.com)

TJS Positions May 2026 (TJS-13/21 in HEO and 24 in GTO not displayed) (spacemap42.com)

China’s Growing TJS Catalog (13 of 23 Have Publicly Unknown Missions) (Gunther’s Space Page, Celestrak.org)

China Added a Record 9 TJS Satellites in 2025(Gunther’s Space Page)