China Claims It Has Launched A '6G' Test Satellite Into Orbit
CZ-6 launched the 'supposedly' '6G' satellite into space
China launched what it claimed is the first 6G experimental satellite to test communications from space using high-frequency terahertz spectrum
The China Embassy in the US tweeted that the supposed “6G” satellite was one
of 13 aboard the Long March-6 rocket, which launched on 6 November at the
Taiyuan Satellite Launch Centre in Shanxi province.
The 70 kg 6G test satellite aims to verify the performance of data transmission
using terahertz spectrum and will test a number of smart city, environmental
protection and disaster prevention applications, such as crop and forest fire
monitoring, China Global Television Network reported.
#China sends 13 satellites into orbit with a single rocket, including the world's first 6G experiment satellite. pic.twitter.com/c10PmPJf11
— Chinese Embassy in US (@ChineseEmbinUS) November 6, 2020
No 6G Standard For Years
The next-generation mobile access technology, which won’t have formal
specifications worked out for a number of years, has started to gain momentum
as major industry players back a launch as early as 2030.
Samsung expects the ITU-R to begin work on 6G in 2021, with the standard to be
completed as early as 2028, opening the door to the earliest deployments in
ten years.
The challenges to 6G are many, including requiring 100-times the data
throughput of 5G and sub-millisecond latency, AT&T executive Mazin Gilbert
said at the 6G Symposium last month.
In mid-October US operators Verizon, AT&T, T-Mobile US and US Cellular
joined other operators under the guise of the Next G Alliance, aiming to steer
development of 6G and establish North America as a global leader in the
technology.
NTT Docomo in Japan started early moves to develop 6G technology in January
with a goal of a commercial launch by 2030, and in May China Unicom and ZTE
signed a strategic agreement to develop 6G technologies.
CGTN
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