Shiyan (satellite)

Shiyan
实验卫星
Shíyàn Wèixīng
Program overview
CountryChina People's Republic of China
PurposeExperimental
StatusActive
Program history
Duration2004–Present
First flight18 April 2004
Last flight11 November 2024
Successes39
Failures0
Launch site(s)
Vehicle information
Launch vehicle(s)


Shiyan (SY, simplified Chinese: 实验; traditional Chinese: 實驗; pinyin: Shíyàn; lit. 'experiment') is a Chinese experimental satellite program consisting of a variety of test satellites. Given the classified nature of the satellites, Chinese government statements regarding the missions of Shiyan satellites follow the common refrain of agricultural monitoring and space environment observation — the same offered for other classified programs such as the Tongxin Jishu Shiyan, Yaogan, and Shijian programs. Alternatively named Tansuo satellites, Shiyan satellites occupy varying orbits including low Earth, polar Sun-synchronous, geosynchronous, and highly-elliptical orbits and are believed to accomplish a diverse set of missions from rendezvous proximity operations (RPO) to earth imaging.[1][2] Though similarly named, the Shiyan satellite program is not to be confused with the separate Shijian satellite program.

  1. ^ Krebs, Gunter Dirk (21 July 2019). "SY 1, 2 (TS 1, 2)". Gunter's Space Page.
  2. ^ "Shiyan 7". NASA. 27 April 2022.