111. start RN 3B.
603. start z serii rakiet CZ.
67. start z Chin w 2025.
Satelita będzie tworzył cyfrowe mapy topograficzne, modele wysokości i inne rodzaje map geograficznych.
Gaofen-14-02 będzie również współpracował z już działającym satelitą Gaofen-14 , wystrzelonym 06.12.2020.https://www.china-in-space.com/p/new-mapping-spacecraft-deliveredGaofen z Xichang 26.10. o 03:55 z Xichang wystrzelona została RN CZ-3B, która wyniosła na orbitę heliosynchroniczną satelitę Gaofen-14 02.
http://lk.astronautilus.pl/n251016.htm#13Long March-3B launches Gaofen-14 02China successfully launches new satellite
Source: Xinhua Editor: huaxia 2025-10-26 13:06:30
XICHANG, Oct. 26 (Xinhua) -- China on Sunday sent a new satellite into space from the Xichang Satellite Launch Center in its southwestern Sichuan Province.
The Gaofen-14 02 satellite was launched at 11:55 a.m. (Beijing Time) aboard a Long March-3B carrier rocket and entered the planned orbit successfully.
This satellite is capable of efficiently acquiring high-precision stereo imagery on a global scale, providing fundamental geographic information support for national economic development and national defense construction.
The launch marked the 603rd flight mission of the Long March carrier rocket series. ■
https://english.news.cn/20251026/92a736adb4e7463f9a465b893c438b02/c.html 2) Zdjęcie górnego stopnia rakiety wykonane 15.04.2026 przez satelitę konstelacji
WorldView Legion z odległości 88. km.
Vantor @vantortech 8:15 PM · Jun 2, 2026
This is a spent Chinese Long March 3B rocket body, imaged by a Vantor WorldView Legion satellite from 88 km away.
The image quality is not simply about range. It reflects the strength of Vantor’s advanced WorldView constellation and high-performance imaging hardware, which enable detailed observation of objects in orbit.
It’s a powerful example of Vantor’s NEI tasking through our WorldView Space product line: using high-resolution satellites to look out into space and capture detailed imagery of objects in orbit.
Why does that matter? Most tracking systems can show where an object is. WorldView Space NEI helps show what it is, its structure, orientation, condition, and potential risk. It can also support Movement Analysis, helping operators understand whether an object is intact, tumbling, spinning, or otherwise changing behavior over time.
That level of detail is especially important for large rocket bodies like this one. They are big, long-lived debris objects that share orbits with critical infrastructure, including communications, Earth observation, weather, science, and national security satellites. A single collision involving an intact rocket stage can create thousands of new fragments, increasing risk across already crowded orbital regions.
As launch activity accelerates, we need to understand not just where objects are in space, but what they are, how they are moving, and how they may behave over time.
https://twitter.com/vantortech/status/2061874310755610929Michal Vaclavik @Kosmo_Michal 5:03 PM · Jun 3, 2026
Translated from Czech
The WorldView Legion satellite from @Vantor captured an image of the third stage of the CZ-3B carrier rocket in mid-April. On October 26, 2025, it delivered the Gaofen 14-02 (Kao-fen) satellite to a sun-synchronous orbit. The image was taken from a distance of 88 km, and the resolution of the original image is 5.7 cm.
https://x.com/Kosmo_Michal/status/2062188339831128180----
AKT
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