China LandSpace's methane-powered rocket sends satellites into orbit
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[December 09, 2023]
BEIJING (Reuters) -A rocket developed by LandSpace
Technology on Saturday launched three satellites into orbit, a milestone
in the Chinese private rocket startup's mission to test whether its
vehicle using methane and liquid oxygen is ready for commercial
liftoffs.
The success could boost investor confidence in methane as a potential
rocket fuel, which is deemed able to help slash costs and support
reusable rockets in a cleaner and more efficient way.
Several private Chinese rocket startups have lined up test or commercial
launches, aiming to prepare their products for the increasing demand in
China's expanding commercial space industry, amid growing competition to
form a constellation of satellites as an alternative to Elon Musk's
Starlink.
Zhuque-2 Y-3 blasted off at 7:39 a.m. (1139 GMT on Friday) from Jiuquan
Satellite Launch Center in China's Inner Mongolia region, becoming the
third LandSpace test rocket for Zhuque-2, and the first that succeeded
in lifting satellites.
A second attempt, without real satellites, in July made LandSpace the
world's first company to launch methane-liquid oxygen rocket, ahead of
U.S. rivals including Musk's SpaceX and Jeff Bezos' Blue Origin.
The two launches showed Zhuque-2 is reliable enough for commercial
launches, LandSpace said in a statement.
LandSpace said the three satellites reached 460-km (285-mile)
sun-synchronous orbit, without providing details on the types and
overall weight of them.
Zhuque-2 is capable of putting payloads totalling 1.5 metric tons into
500-km (300-mile) orbit, which LandSpace plans to increase to 4 tons in
upgraded versions, the Beijing-based company said.
Zhuque-2 Y-3 carried two 50-kilogram test satellites developed by
Chinese startup Spacety, one of which has adopted technologies from a
company named Hongqing, according to a Spacety statement on Saturday.
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The Zhuque-2 Y-3 carrier rocket, a methane-liquid oxygen rocket by
Chinese company LandSpace, carrying satellites takes off from the
Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center, in Gansu province, China December
9, 2023. cnsphoto via REUTERS
Hongqing said in a statement the rocket also carried one of its test
satellites, without disclosing the weight.
The two Hongqing-linked test satellites in Saturday's launch are
designed to support forming a low-orbit satellite constellation,
said Hongqing, in which LandSpace holds a stake.
LandSpace said last year the first launch last December failed,
without specifying whether the test rocket, Zhuque-2 Y-1, carried
any satellite payloads.
The eight-year-old startup said earlier this year it plans to
provide clients with about three launches in 2024 and double that in
2025.
Chinese startup OrienSpace said it has scheduled the debut launch of
its solid-fuel rocket, Gravity-1, in December. Deep Blue Aerospace,
which is developing a reusable kerosene-fuelled rocket, aims to
complete next year its first test of launching the Nebula-1 rocket
to orbit and recovering it.
Galactic Energy on Tuesday launched its solid-propellant rocket
Ceres-1 with two satellites into orbit, after a failure in September
and a series of successful launches earlier.
(Reporting by Roxanne Liu, Ella Cao and Ryan Woo; Editing by Josie
Kao, Grant McCool and William Mallard)
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