Thanks for posting that picture...it's the clearest I've seen showing the payload block below the balloon envelope.
View attachment 114655
No obvious ways to scale the image, so we don't know how big things really are. I'm actually a bit surprised by the size of the solar array...it's pretty big. However, it might not track the sun, which means it won't be pointed to produce maximum power. Putting in a larger array might compensate for the the cosine error. But I'd want to see a photo of the balloon at dusk or dawn to verify it's not pointing the arrays.
Also, note that half the array is shadowed by the sun...probably pretty typical. I'd guess that it has such a big array because, normally, a large portion of it is going to be out of the sun.
There's an obvious equipment bay at the crossing of the two main trusses, looks pretty roomy. Let's call the truss with the solar arrays the "main truss," and the other the "cross truss."
The equipment bay is reasonably sized for 21st century electronics. Curiously,the payload is suspended from the envelope by THREE cables/beams...not four. There isn't a cable to one end of the cross truss. It's possible that the entire truss assembly rotates to point the solar arrays, by adjusting the length of the single cable to the cross truss. Still, it doesn't seem like there'd be a lot of angle adjustment available.
As I speculated earlier, the Chinese would have had to put a lot of batteries aboard to allow the vehicle to operate during a 14-hour night. These obviously aren't located on the cross truss; you can see right through it. The main truss is checkered like the cross truss, but isn't transparent. We might be seeing the same kind of truss on the outside, but the inside is loaded with batteries or other equipment.
The ends of the main truss have paired diamond-shaped structures; on the near side is an object that looks like a radome. May well be a collection antenna, or, possibly, the uplink antenna that connects it to a satellite. Having a radome, though, is curious..it's not like it needs one for aerodynamic purposes. One potential reason is to hide where the antenna is pointing...using a radome make it more difficult to determine what target it's collecting from, or which satellite its transmitting to.
There's another object on the opposite end of the main truss. It doesn't seem to fully match the other unit, though that could be just because of the different viewing aspect.
One thing curious about it is the *sizes* of the antennas. Again, it's hard to judge without a scale, but they don't look that large. Generally, if you're going to try to listen in on someone else's transmission, you need an antenna at least as big as the one that the other guy's use to receive the same signal. These don't seem very big.
And articulation comes into play here, just like the solar arrays. An antenna pointing off the end of the main truss won't be situated for receiving (or transmitting...) a signal off the cross truss. It's possible the entire structure rotates by turning the black disk that the three truss cables are attached to.
Anyway, fun to speculate.
Ron Wanttaja