China's BeiDou navigation satellites are helping the country fight the COVID-19 with high precision from space.
When China was building the two specific hospitals – Huoshenshan and Leishenshan, meaning the gods of fire and thunder respectively, in Wuhan, the epicenter of the epidemic, equipment based on the BeiDou Navigation Satellite System (BDS) provided highly-precise positioning service and speeded up the construction.
Drones based on the BDS have been utilized to spray disinfectant. Police in Ruichang, east China's Jiangxi Province, used BDS-based drones to patrol crowded places to prevent intensive contacts.
China's Ministry of Transport sent epidemic prevention and transportation service information to more than six million vehicles via the BDS terminals and provided services for the transportation of emergency materials to the most-hit areas.
China Post Group Co., Ltd. has installed 5,000 BDS terminals on its trunk line vehicle and used the vehicle positioning information to conduct real-time supervision and allocation to ensure timely delivery of epidemic prevention materials.
In Wuhan, the BDS-based robots of the e-commerce and logistics company JD.com delivered medical materials to hospitals and medical isolation venues with high speed.
China began to construct its navigation system, named after the Chinese term for the Big Dipper constellation, in the 1990s and started serving the Asia-Pacific Region in 2012.
Over the past two years, China has successfully sent 28 BDS-3 satellites and two BDS-2 satellites into orbit.
With the system's upgraded intelligent operation and maintenance capabilities, the BDS-3 has provided stable and accurate services, boasting a positioning accuracy of better than five meters.
China plans to launch more BDS satellites in March and May to complete the global network.