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China-France satellite launched to monitor most powerful explosions in space

  • The Space-based multi-band astronomical Variable Objects Monitor (SVOM) has blasted off to record intense gamma-ray bursts

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This mission lifts off on Saturday afternoon in Sichuan. Photo: AFP
Ling Xinin Ohio
An observatory built by Chinese and French researchers will hunt for the universe’s most powerful explosions after being launched into a low-Earth orbit in another landmark space mission between the two countries.
The Space-based multi-band astronomical Variable Objects Monitor, or SVOM, blasted off on top of a Long March 2C rocket from western China’s Xichang Satellite Launch Centre at 3pm Chinese time on Saturday, state news agency Xinhua reported.

The 930kg (2,050-pound) probe, which took hundreds of scientists and engineers nearly two decades to develop, will orbit Earth at 625km (450 miles) above the ground to accurately measure the location and energy of distant, violent explosions known as gamma-ray bursts.

The project, led by the China National Space Administration (CNSA) and the French space agency CNES, began in 2006.

“The launch of SVOM closed a loop which started 18 years ago,” François Gonzalez, SVOM’s French project manager at CNES, said.

Over the years, members of the scientific and technical teams learned how to “adapt their own ways” to work together and push the mission forward, he said.

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