Chinese Private Space

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Deep Blue Aerospace Nebula-1A(XY-1A) rocket completed payload faring separation test today
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Nebula-1 is a private LOX/RP-1 fueled rocket with a payload capacity of 2 t to LEO.
 

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Chinese launch firm secures fresh funding for reusable rocket

HELSINKI — Chinese rocket firm Space Pioneer has secured C-round funding for its Tianlong-3 medium-lift reusable launch vehicle.

Space Pioneer announced the funding round July 5. The company’s first launch attempt in April saw the Tianlong-2 rocket make Space Pioneer the first Chinese commercial outfit to reach orbit with a liquid propellant launcher.

The company has now raised a total of three billion Chinese yuan ($414 million) across 11 rounds since its establishment in 2018.

The new funds will be used for the development of the Tianlong-3 kerosene-liquid oxygen launch vehicle and its engine and the construction of a dedicated launch complex at the Jiuquan national spaceport. The funds will also go towards developing mass production capabilities and recruitment.

The first launch of the Tianlong-3 rocket is currently scheduled for May 2024. It is intended to be somewhat comparable to the Falcon 9. If successful, Space Pioneer claims it will be able to launch 30 times per year from 2025.

Tianlong-3 (“Sky Dragon-3”) is a two-stage kerosene-liquid oxygen rocket with a reusable first stage. Space Pioneer’s webpages state that the rocket will be capable of lifting 17 tons of payload to low Earth orbit, or 14 tons to 500-kilometer sun-synchronous orbit.

It will have a takeoff mass of 590 tons and produce 770 tons of thrust. The 71-meter-long Tianlong-3 will have a diameter of 3.8 meters. Previously, many commercial Chinese rockets used 2.25 or 3.35-meter-diameter stages, the dimensions as those of most Long March rockets.

The Tianlong-3 is, according to Space Pioneer, tailor-made for launching satellites for China’s national communications megaconstellation. Tianlong-3 will provide “important strategic support for the country’s new satellite Internet infrastructure,” according to the July 5 statement. The planned 13,000-strong Guowang constellation is seen as China’s answer to Starlink.

More recently established Chinese commercial launch companies including Space Pioneer and OrienSpace are opting to develop much larger launch vehicles than earlier movers, which have committed to launchers with payload capacities on the order of a few thousand kilograms. This shift has been initiated by the emergence of the possibility of contracts for Guowang and commercial cargo missions. Space Pioneer says it has already signed 10 orders for launches on the Tianlong-2.

Meanwhile, fellow Chinese commercial firm Landspace is gearing up for the second launch of its Zhuque-2 methane-liquid oxygen rocket from Jiuquan. Airspace closure notices indicate a launch window of 1:53 a.m. to 4:14 a.m. Eastern July 12.

Beijing-based iSpace also recently tested engines for its Hyperbola-2 methalox launcher.
 

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China’s Landspace set for second methalox rocket launch
Andrew Jones

HELSINKI — Chinese commercial launch firm Landspace is set for a second attempt to reach orbit with its Zhuque-2 rocket July 12.

The second Zhuque-2 methane-liquid oxygen rocket was rolled out to the pad at Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center in the Gobi Desert July 6, according to Chinese social media posts.

Satellite imagery later confirmed the development. Earlier Chinese media reports indicate the launch is scheduled for July 12 Beijing time.

If successful, Zhuque-2 (“Vermillion Bird-2”) will become the world’s first methalox launch vehicle to achieve orbit. A range of methalox rockets, including SpaceX’s Starship, the ULA Vulcan, Blue Origin’s New Glenn, Rocket Lab’s Neutron and Terran R from Relativity Space, are at various stages of development and testing.

A successful Zhuque-2 flight would also make Landspace the second private Chinese rocket company to perform a successful launch with a liquid propellant rocket. Space Pioneer, full name Beijing Tianbing Technology Co., Ltd, became the first such company in April with the launch of its Tianlong-2 rocket.

The upcoming launch comes almost seven months after the debut flight of the Zhuque-2, also from Jiuquan. That December 2022 launch ended in failure due to an issue with a liquid oxygen inlet pipe feeding four vernier thrusters on the rocket’s second stage.

Zhuque-2 is powered by gas generator engines producing 268 tons of thrust. It is capable of delivering a 6,000-kilogram payload capacity to a 200-kilometer low Earth orbit (LEO), or 4,000 kilograms to 500-kilometer sun-synchronous orbit (SSO), according to Landspace.

The rocket has a diameter of 3.35 meters—the same as a number of national Long March rockets—a total length of 49.5 meters and a take-off mass of 219 tons.

The rocket is currently expendable but Landspace is working on a s tested a restartable version of the 80-ton-thrust TQ-12 engine which powers the Zhuque-2 first stage.

The firm is also working on an improved second-stage engine which will not require vernier engines. This upgraded engine will not be present on the second Zhuque-2.

Landspace is one of the earliest and best-funded of China’s emerging commercial launch firms. The company’s first launch took place four years ago with the much smaller and simpler solid-propellant Zhuque-1 and ended in failure.

The Chinese government opened up parts of the space sector to private capital in late 2014, seen to be a reaction to developments in the U.S.

This policy shift and subsequent policy support and guidance has been the catalyst for the emergence of hundreds of space-related companies engaged in a range of activities, including launch, satellite operation and manufacture, ground stations, downstream applications, and more.

A number of commercial launch companies are now looking to China’s “Guowang” national satellite internet project as a potential source of contracts and revenue.

China recently opened a call for space station commercial cargo proposals, further indicating that commercial firms will have a growing role to play in the country’s space sector.

Landspace and other early movers in China’s commercial launch sector such as iSpace and Galactic Energy committed to plans to develop light-lift solid and liquid propellant rockets.

Newer entrants such as Space Pioneer and Orienspace are moving directly towards medium-lift and heavier classes of launchers, likely informed by the emergence of the possible satellite internet and programs.

A range of remote sensing constellations are also being designed and planned by a range of state and commercial actors, providing further opportunities for launch contracts.The first launch of China’s communications megaconstellation satellites is expected in the second half of the year, using a Long March rocket developed by China’s state-owned main space contractor, CASC.

 

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Watch the latest update on Everyday Astronaut
 

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Name: Zhuque-2
Manufacturer: Land Space Technology
Fuel: LOX/CH4
Payload: Multiple undisclosed
Launch site: LC96, JSLC, Inner Mongolia
Launch time: UTC+8 09:00 12 July 2023
Goal: Word's first methane fueled orbital launcher
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All the Chinese private orbital launch attempts as of 12 July 2023

Green: Successful Red: Failure
27 Oct 2018 Land Space Zhuque-1 light solid (decommissioned)
27 Mar 2019 One Space OS-M light solid (decommissioned)

25 July 2019 i-Space Hyperbola-1 light solid
7 Nov 2020 Galactic Energy Ceres-1 light solid

1 Feb 2021 i-Space Hyperbola-1 light solid
3 Aug 2021 i-Space Hyperbola-1 light solid

7 Dec 2021 Galactic Energy Ceres-1 light solid
13 May 2022 i-Space Hyperbola-1 light solid
9 Aug 2022 Galactic Energy Ceres-1 light solid
16 Nov 2022 Galactic Energy Ceres-1 light solid

14 Dec 2022 Land Space Zhuque-2 medium lift LOX/CH4 liquid
9 Jan 2023 Galactic Energy Ceres-1 light solid
2 Apr 2023 Space Pioneer Tianlong-2 medium lift LOX/RP-1 liquid
7 Apr 2023 i-Space Hyperbola-1 light solid
12 July 2023 Land Space Zhuque-2 medium lift LOX/CH4 liquid

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