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China's suborbital aerospace plane makes maiden flight
by Staff Writers
Beijing (XNA) Jul 19, 2021

File image of Jiageng-1 under development at the University of Xiamen.

China carried out the maiden flight of the prototype of a reusable suborbital aerospace plane in North China's Inner Mongolia autonomous region on Friday, according to China Aerospace Science and Technology Corp, the country's major space contractor.

The unnamed prototype was lifted by a carrier rocket at the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center and flew for a certain period of time before making a conventional landing at the Alxa Right Banner Airport. The flight test was successful, the State-owned conglomerate said in a statement, adding that the cutting-edge vehicle incorporates both aviation and space technologies.

The test laid a solid foundation for China to develop a reusable space transportation system, the statement noted. It did not give details of the event.

This is the second time for China Aerospace Science and Technology Corp, a leading domestic supplier of carrier rockets and ballistic missiles, to make public development in its reusable vehicle project.

In September last year, the company flight-tested a reusable experimental spacecraft from the Jiuquan center. It did not publish detailed information, photos or videos about the test.

China Aerospace Science and Industry Corp, another space contractor, is also working on a reusable aerospace plane and plans to put it to commercial flight by 2030. The company said it has conducted a key flight test by a conceptual demonstration prototype to verify the propulsion shift mechanism between ramjet and rocket engine.

Designers have said that such craft can be used in a wide range of operations, such as space tourism, astronaut commuting, satellite deployment, cargo transportation and emergency rescue.

Source: Xinhua News Agency


Related Links
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ROCKET SCIENCE
India's ISRO tests high-powered rocket engine for country's first manned mission
New Delhi (Sputnik) Jul 16, 2021
The Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) has planned to send two uncrewed flights to test end-to-end capacity for the country's first manned mission, Gaganyaan. As the first flight deadline is December, the space agency is racing against time to launch the mission as the COVID-19 lockdown has drastically affected their schedule. The Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) has successfully conducted its third long-duration hot test of the liquid-propellant Vikas engine for the Gaganyaan prog ... read more

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