China Daily (Hong Kong)

China to develop satellite-delivery rockets released from airplanes

- By ZHAO LEI zhaolei@chinadaily.com.cn

China will develop a new generation of rockets launched from aircraft that can put satellites into space, according to Li Tongyu, the head of carrier rocket developmen­t at the China Academy of Launch Vehicle Technology.

Air-launched rockets can rapidly replace dysfunctio­nal satellites or, in cases of disaster relief, quickly send up Earth observatio­n satellites to assist in the effort, Li said.

Designers at the academy, which is the main developer of Chinese carrier rockets, have designed a model capable of sending a payload of about 100 kilograms into low Earth orbit and are ready to produce one if the government asks, he said. They plan to design a larger rocket that could carry 200 kg into orbit.

“The Y-20 strategic transport plane will be the carrier of these rockets. The jet will hold a rocket within its fuselage and release it at a certain altitude. The rocket will be ignited after it leaves the plane,” Li said.

Large satellites will still have to be put into orbit with con- ventional rockets, experts said.

Delivery of the Y-20 to the Chinese Air Force began in July. It is China’s first domestical­ly developed heavy-lift transport plane and has a maximum takeoff weight of more than 200 metric tons and a maximum payload of about 66 tons, aviation experts said.

Solid-fuel rockets can be launched from planes much faster than land-based, liquidfuel­ed rockets, where preparatio­n can take days, weeks or longer, in part because it takes so much time to pump in the fuel, experts said.

Each mission involving a solid-fuel rocket launched by a Y-20 would take only 12 hours of preparatio­n to place a 200 kg satellite into a sun-synchronou­s orbit 700 km above Earth, according to estimates by Long Lehao, an academicia­n of the Chinese Academy of Engineerin­g, and other researcher­s at the China Academy of Launch Vehicle Technology. The estimates were in an article published in October in the Journal of Deep-Space Exploratio­n.

Other advantages of such rockets are that they are flexible in deployment and use and do not need ground infrastruc­ture, said Pang Zhihao, executive editor-in-chief of Space Internatio­nal magazine. They also are less susceptibl­e to bad weather and launch costs are lower than those of ground-launched rockets, he added.

The United States undertook the world’s first airlaunche­d space mission in 1990, in which a Pegasus rocket developed by the former Orbital Sciences Corp was launched from a refitted B-52 strategic bomber to send two small satellites into orbit. Since then, 43 Pegasus missions have been carried out, with the most recent in December.

Several US space companies, including Virgin Galactic and Generation Orbit Launch Services, are developing air-launched rockets.

Chinese designers have been quietly working on the concept for years. China Aerospace Science and Technology Corp, parent of Li’s academy, displayed a scale model of a winged, solid-propellant, airlaunche­d rocket in 2006 at the Sixth China Internatio­nal Aviation and Aerospace Exhibition in Zhuhai, Guangdong province.

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