Global Times - Weekend

Long March-5 blasts off to success

► China’s state-of-the-art carrier rocket sends satellite to orbit

- By Deng Xiaoci

China’s heavy-lift launch vehicle Long March-5 returned to flight after a break of more than two years, as it successful­ly sent a high-throughput communicat­ion satellite Shijian-20 into planned orbit on Friday, marking a huge comeback for the currently strongest member of the country’s carrier rocket family.

The 20-story tall rocket [about 57 meters in height], codenamed Long March-5 Y3 for the mission, took off from Wenchang Space Launch Center in South China’s Hainan Province on Friday around 8:45 pm, and after a flight of approximat­elhy 30 minutes , the rocket successful­ly placed the Shijian-20 satellite, whose weight at launch was over 8,000 kilograms, into the planned geosynchro­nous orbit (GEO).

The satellite is by far the country’s heaviest GEO satellite, whose full wingspan of solar panels exceeds 40 meters, some 10 meters longer than those of a Boeing 737 airplane.

Shijian-20 is an experiment satellite designed to test the country’s newgenerat­ion large GEO satellite platform, the Dongfangho­ng-5, or DFH-5, Pang Zhihao, a Beijing-based expert in space exploratio­n, told the Global Times on Friday.

A number of high-throughput satellites with message capability of up to more than 1 terabyte per second (Tbps) will be developed based on the platform and to provide communicat­ion and internet services to countries and regions along the Belt and Road Initiative in around 2022, according to satellite developer China Academy of Space Technology, under the biggest Chinese state-backed aerospace contractor China Aerospace Science and Industry Corp (CASC).

Super 2020

The Friday launch mission also marked the third flight of Long March-5, which took place more than two years after a July 2017 launch failure on the rocket’s second test flight due to an engine problem, according to its developer, the China Academy of Launch Vehicle Technology (CALT), also under CASC.

The successful flight of Long March-5 has given impetus to China’s ambitious heavy payload space projects for a “Super 2020,” during which the country plans to perform missions including the Chang’e-5 lunar sample return mission and the country’s first Mars probe mission, according to the developer, as well as the constructi­on of the country’s future space station.

“It shows that Long March-5 rockets have accelerate­d its developmen­t toward the engineerin­g applicatio­n stage,” said Wang Xiaojun, director of the CALT.

“By 2020, we plan to launch the Long March5B for the first time, for the Chang’e-5 lunar sample return mission and a Mars probe,” he revealed.

According to the CALT boss, work on the Long March-5 rocket families for the later missions is going smoothly.

Li Dong, chief designer of the Long March-5, told the Global Times that there are two configurat­ions of the heavy-lift carrier rocket. Long March-5B, a smaller variant of the rocket with a maximum payload capability of around 25 tons to low Earth orbit (LEO), will provide strong support for the constructi­on of China’s planned manned space station.

Another configurat­ion of the rocket will be capable of sending payloads of up to 14 tons to the geosynchro­nous orbit and will serve missions such as lunar sample returns and deep space exploratio­n, Li said.

Big ticket to space powerhouse club

It is safe to say that the Long March-5, with a core diameter of five meters, which is almost double China’s previous payload lifting capabiliti­es, is a big ticket giving China entry into the world space powerhouse club, Wang Ya’nan, chief editor of Aerospace Knowledge magazine, told the Global Times on Friday.

The “big ticket” will not only provide direct support for imminent deep space exploratio­n programs such as the Chang’e-5 lunar probe and the country’s first ever Mars probe, but will also test the reliabilit­y and maintenanc­e capability of the country’s heavy-lift engines, paving the way for the next generation of super heavy-lift launch vehicles such as the Long March-9, Wang noted.

China’s heavy-lift carrier rocket, the Long March-9, is expected to make its maiden flight around 2030 and will support manned lunar exploratio­n, deep space exploratio­n and constructi­on of a space-based solar power plant.

 ?? Photo: Lei Sheng/People’s Daily ?? China’s Long March-5 Y3 carrier rocket ascends from Wenchang Space Launch Center in South China’s Hainan Province on Friday.
Photo: Lei Sheng/People’s Daily China’s Long March-5 Y3 carrier rocket ascends from Wenchang Space Launch Center in South China’s Hainan Province on Friday.
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