Official name SJ-2B
Alternative name Shi Jian 2B
Cospar ID 1981-093D
Norad ID 12845
Launch date 1981-09-19
Launch site JSC
Launch vehicle FB-1
Country/Organization China
Type application Technology
RCS size LARGE
Decay date 1982-08-17
Shape Oct Cyl + 4 Pan
Mass (kg) 27.75
Diameter (m) 1.2
Height (m) 1.1
Span (m^2) 3.3
Power 4 deployable fixed solar arrays, batteries

SJ 2 (Shi Jian 2) was a Chinese satellite mission to measure and study the micrometeoroids and debris environment and to conduct electromagnetic background experiments.

the satellite featured a spin-stabilized octahedral prism shaped structure and and was sun-pointing with a total mass of 250 kg. The satellite structure had a length of 1.2 m and an outer diameter of 0.615 m. Four deployable solar wings are attached to the top of the satellite.

The satellite carried instruments for measuring space debris:

  • MMW (Millimeter Wave) Radar. The objective is to detect debris of size 3-10 cm or larger by remote sensing methods in the altitude range of 600 to 1300 km. The instrument provides measurements with a velocity resolution of <50 m/s; a direction resolution of <±1 arcsec; the time resolution is <1 s;
  • IP (Impact Detector). The objective is to collect particles and impacting radiation (light) signals. The instrument consists of a charge detector and a light detector, each with different collecting apertures and different viewing directions. The charge detector collects particles in the mass range of 10-7 to 10-15 g, a size range of 0.05 to 50 µm, and a velocity resolution of <10 km/s. The instrument mass is 6 kg (6 W power). - The light detector collects particles in the mass range of 10-3 to 10-7 g, a size range of 50 µm to 0.5 mm, and a velocity resolution of <10 km/s.
  • Large Sensitive Array (located at the back of the solar panel). The objective is to detect the total impact effect by measuring the change of the resistance.
  • Optical Monitor. The objective is to monitor the surface change of the two solar panels (caused by debris impacts). The instrument uses four CCD cameras which are located inside the spacecraft.

SJ 2 was launched as one of three payloads on a FB-1 rocket in September 1981. An earlier launch failure in July 1979 reportedly carried the same payloads.

Satellite COSPAR Date LS Launch Vehicle Remarks
SJ-2B 1981-093D 1981-09-19 JSC FB-1 with SJ 2A, SJ 2B