Source: China Daily | 2025-06-24 | Editor:Jennifer
Construction of supporting infrastructure for a cutting-edge solar telescope began Tuesday in Daocheng county in Southwest China's Sichuan province, marking a significant step toward a new era of high-resolution solar observation.
The 2.5-meter Wide-field and High-resolution Solar Telescope, a national research instrumentation project, is led by Nanjing University in collaboration with the Nanjing Institute of Astronomical Optics and Technology and the Yunnan Observatories, both under the Chinese Academy of Sciences.
The construction of the telescope officially began in 2022. Upon completion, it will be the world's largest axisymmetric solar telescope.
Strategically situated at an elevation of 4,700 meters on an unnamed mountain in Daocheng County, the chosen site boasts exceptional atmospheric stability and solar observation conditions.
This location is poised to become the world's highest solar observatory, providing a critical foundation for acquiring world-class observational data.
Construction of the supporting infrastructure and telescope assembly is scheduled for completion by the end of 2026, followed by comprehensive system commissioning and testing.
China has maintained high utilization rates of wind and solar power, official data showed Sunday, suggesting the world's renewables powerhouse has ensured both ...
Amid global efforts to replace fossil fuels with clean energy, Chinese scientists and engineers are working on a bright idea — soaking up abundant energy from ...
China added more than 100 million kilowatts of wind and photovoltaic power capacity in the first half of this year, accounting for 71% of the country's newly in...
A Chinese commercial space company on Sunday launched a Long March-2D rocket, placing the Lingxi-03 satellite into preset orbit.
China launched its first solar observation satellite at 6:51 p.m. Beijing Time Thursday from the Taiyuan Satellite Launch Center.
If you’ve stopped what you’re doing, looked up at the sky yesterday afternoon, you may have seen a rare annular eclipse. If you missed it, you can look throug...