Chinese space startup revs up for reusable rocket race
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[August 10, 2019]
BEIJING (Reuters) - Chinese startup
LinkSpace on Saturday completed its third test of a reusable rocket in
five months, stepping up the pace in China's race to develop a
technology key to cheap space launches in an expected global boom in
satellite deployment.
LinkSpace's RLV-T5 rocket blasted off in a desert in western Qinghai
province at 0230 GMT. It flew as high as 300 meters (984 feet) before
returning to the launchpad on its own after 50 seconds, CEO Hu Zhenyu,
26, told Reuters.
The Beijing-based company aims to conduct a "kilometer-level" test at
some point, Hu said.
The RLV-T5 previously hovered 20 meters and 40 meters above the ground
in two tests in March and April respectively.
China envisions constellations of commercial satellites that can offer
services ranging from high-speed internet for aircraft and rural areas
to tracking coal shipments and commuter traffic.
Reliable, low-cost and frequent launches will be key, with recoverable
or partially-recoverable rockets like the Falcon 9 from Elon Musk's
SpaceX one pathway to eventually affordable satellite deployment
missions.
SpaceX has already used recoverable rockets on a number of orbital
missions since a historic launch early in 2017, spurring Europe, Russia,
Japan and China to speed up their own research into the technology or at
least consider studying it.
LinkSpace's test flight on Saturday came on the heels of a historic
delivery of a satellite into orbit last month by privately owned Chinese
firm iSpace.
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Linkspace's engineers pack the reusable rocket RLV-T5, also known as
NewLine Baby, onto a truck before a test launch on a vacant plot of
land near the company's development site in Longkou, Shandong
province, China, April 18, 2019. REUTERS/Jason Lee/File Photo
Beijing-based iSpace told Reuters last week that it was also
planning to launch a recoverable rocket, in 2021.
The reusable design of its next-generation rocket could lead to a
predicted cost reduction of 70%, iSpace estimated.
LinkSpace previously told Reuters it hoped to charge no more than 30
million yuan ($4.25 million) per reusable launch.
That's a fraction of the $25 million to $30 million needed for a
launch on a Northrop Grumman Innovation Systems Pegasus, a commonly
used small rocket. The Pegasus is launched from a high-altitude
aircraft and is not reusable.
(Reporting by Ryan Woo; Editing by Joseph Radford)
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