China Roundup: Chang Zheng 8A set for debut, Chinese hopper flies 75 km  high-altitude test
Date:
Wed, 22 Jan 2025 23:21:54 +0000
Description:
Chinas Chang Zheng 8A rocket is set for its maiden flight from the Hainan  commercial The post China Roundup: Chang Zheng 8A set for debut, Chinese  hopper flies 75 km high-altitude test appeared first on NASASpaceFlight.com .
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Chinas Chang Zheng 8A rocket is set for its maiden flight from the Hainan  commercial spaceport this month. Meanwhile, a Chang Zheng 12A development  prototype flew a 75 km high-altitude test flight this week with an uncertain  outcome. 2025 has begun with land and sea launches as commercial companies  gear up to debut new and reusable vehicles this year. 
Meanwhile, Shenzhou-19 taikonauts Cai Xuzhe and Song LingDong completed a  second spacewalk this week, following their record-breaking longest spacewalk  in December. This latest spacewalk on Jan. 20 saw the pair install additional  debris shielding, aided by the stations robotic arm and lasted eight and a  half hours. 
 Shenzhou-19 crew conduct a second EVA from the Tiangong space station.  (Credit: CCTV/CMSA) 
China closed 2024 with a slight increase of 68 launches, setting a new annual  record. Despite this, the number of successful launches, 65, remained the 
same as in 2023. These missions carried 270 satellites into orbit,  representing an increase of 20% from 2023. The increasing number of  communications satellites being launched has contributed to this, including  the first launches for the Qianfan and GuoWang mega constellations during the  latter half of the year. 
State-owned operator SatNets first batch of ten GuoWang satellites was  launched into polar orbit in mid-December. Since then, a second batch has  arrived at Wenchang for GuoWangs next launch. Furthermore, three batches of 
18 SpaceSail Qianfan satellites for the first polar shell of the G60  constellation have been launched so far. The second batch of these 
satellites, launched in October, may have experienced issues raising their  orbits to an operational altitude. 
These missions flew from the Taiyuan Satellite Launch Center atop Chang Zheng  6A rockets, though other carriers from commercial launch providers may also  carry the satellites for future launches. SatNet is obliged to launch half of  the planned constellation  almost 6,500 satellites  by 2032. A third  constellation, Honghu-3, could soon join these two mega constellations.  Hongqing Technology, nearly half-owned by Landspace, filed plans for this  10,000-satellite constellation across 160 orbital planes in May. Lijian-1 Y6  (Kinetica-1) is transported to the pad. (Credit: CAS Space) 
The potential to set a new record for successful missions in a year was  narrowly missed when the final Chinese launch of 2024 failed. CAS Spaces  Lijian-1 (also known as the Kinetica-1) experienced a problem with attitude  control just seconds after igniting the third stage, subsequently losing the  11 payloads on board. The flight was one of only three Chinese missions to  fail in 2024, the other two being a Hyperbola-1 launch in July and the 
DRO-A/B mission in March. 
Missions on Chang Zheng vehicles accounted for 78% of Chinese launches in 
2024  higher than the anticipated 70/30 split between national and commercial  launches at the start of the year. The commercial sector is expected to  deliver new vehicles and launches in 2025 as it receives an influx of  investment and production rates increase. Several of these companies have 
been developing vehicles with reusable first stages, which could begin to  emerge in the coming months. SAST VTVL vehicle on the pad ahead of the 75 km  high-altitude test. (Credit: Lazy_doc) 
 SAST high-altitude test flight 
The Shanghai Academy of Spaceflight Technology (SAST) and China Aerospace  Science and Technology Corporation (CASC) conducted another vertical take-off  and vertical landing (VTVL) test on Jan. 19. The two companies had performed 
a 10 km flight test in June from the Jiuquan site. Its unclear if the latest  75 km test used the same prototype vehicle in the 10 km test. Design changes  include newer aerodynamic fins positioned lower on the vehicle body. 
The vehicle lifted off from the Haiyang facility in the Shangdong province,  the site for recent sea launches of the Jielong 3, Ceres 1S, and Gravity 1  rockets. The test flight is expected to inform the development of the  forthcoming Chang Zheng 12A (CZ-12A) partially reusable rocket. The 
expendable Chang Zheng 12 (CZ-12), which took its maiden launch from Hainan 
in November, is powered by four kerosene-based YF-100K engines. The CZ-12A,  which will host a reusable first stage, is expected to utilize seven Longyun  engines burning liquid methane and oxygen instead. Render of the Chang Zheng  12A. (Credit: CASC) 
The prototype, named the Longxing-2, had no landing legs. It was originally  expected to land on a sea platform but instead performed a splashdown in the  sea. Three Longyun engines propelled the vehicle on ascent to around 75 km,  reducing to one engine before the prototype was expected to make an unpowered  descent using the four grid fins for attitude control. With no official  announcement of success, its currently unclear if an anomaly occurred during  the test. 
 Chang Zheng 8A approaches its maiden flight 
Despite completing launch rehearsals in December, the Commercial Launch  Complex 1 (LC-1) pad at the Hainan International Commercial Aerospace Launch  Center in South China has yet to see its inaugural launch. The pad is  dedicated to the Chang Zheng 8 (CZ-8) rocket, and a launch carrying a batch 
of Qianfan satellites was expected before the end of 2024. CZ-8A with big 
head rehearsals with launch tower. May launch next month. pic via  
https://t.co/ImUpuxUJCr pic.twitter.com/mEOtLCQ7KX 
 Ace of Razgriz (@raz_liu) December 30, 2024 
 
The larger Chang Zheng 8A (CZ-8A) variation has since been transported to the  Commercial LC-1 pad for its maiden launch, which is targeted for no earlier  than Jan. 25. CZ-8A has a more powerful second stage powered by two upgraded  YF-75H engines that use liquid hydrogen and oxygen as propellants. The first  stage uses the same liquid kerosene and liquid oxygen YF-100 engines as other  Chang Zheng rockets. 
The CZ-8A is specifically developed to meet the launch requirements of  large-scale constellation networks in medium-Earth and low-Earth orbits 
(LEO), according to chief designer Song Zhengyu. Developed by the China  Academy of Launch Vehicle Technology (CALT), the 3.35-diameter expendable  vehicle has been in development for 28 months. It features a 5.2 m diameter  fairing, which increases payload capacity and lowers costs. The vehicle will  be capable of carrying 8,400 kg to LEO or up to 7,000 kg to a Sun-synchronous  orbit (SSO). 
Situated 600 m away, the neighboring universal Commercial Launch Complex 2  (LC-2) pad launched its first mission in late November with the debut of the  Chang Zheng 12, the first of various liquid-fuelled vehicles to utilize this  launch facility. The two pads are collectively expected to deliver up to 32  launches per year for the commercial spaceport. Artists impression of solar  power satellite pillars in orbit. (Credit: ESA) 
 China announces orbital solar power station 
China has announced plans to build a massive solar power station in  geostationary orbit by 2030. The station would harness solar energy from an  altitude of around 36,000 km and transmit it back to Earth through  high-frequency microwaves. The orbiting solar array will measure one 
kilometer in length. On the ground, a mesh-like network of antennas, known as  a rectenna, would collect the energy and convert it to electricity. 
While a full-scale deployment of an orbital power station isnt expected until  2040, Chinas first power station will test energy transmission by the decades  end. Various nations and space agencies have been exploring the field, such 
as the European Space Agencys (ESA) SOLARIS program and the Japanese 
Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA). UK-based Space Solar made a breakthrough  in wireless power transmission last April using 360-degree beam steering with  its HARRIER demonstrator, a forerunner to the planned CASSIOPeiA satellite  based on the same technology. 
The infrastructure would be launched via a Chang Zheng 9 (CZ-9) rocket, and  robotics would assemble the solar array in orbit. CZ-9 is planned to have the  capacity to lift 150,000 kg to LEO or 54,000 kg to the Moon through a  trans-lunar injection. The plans for the solar array were unveiled at a 
recent lecture organized by the Chinese Academy of Sciences. The proposal was  delivered by project lead Long Lehao, the chief designer of the early Chang  Zheng rockets in the late 1980s and 1990s. 
Space-based solar arrays could revolutionize global energy supply and reduce  dependence on oil. Solar energy in space is potentially as much as ten times  more energetic than the filtered sunlight that reaches Earths surface.  ZhuQue-2E ascends on its maiden launch. (Credit: Landspace) 
 Commercial launch providers 
Various new rockets are expected to emerge from the Chinese commercial sector  during the first half of 2025. Landspace, whose ZhuQue-2 rocket was the first  methane-fueled rocket to reach orbit successfully, is targeting mid-2025 for  the debut flight of its ZhuQue-3 rocket. This follows the successful VTVL  testing of a prototype vehicle last year at LandSpaces existing facility at  the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center, where construction also began on a new  pad for the vehicle. 
The new ZhuQue-3 vehicle will stand 76.6 m tall, with a 4.5 m core diameter  and a 5.2 m fairing. It is constructed in stainless steel and intended to be  reusable up to 20 times per booster, adding landing legs and grid fins to the  first-stage design. However, Landspaces first recovery attempts arent 
expected until 2026. This month, the company shared an image of the nine  Tianque-12 (TQ-12) first stage engines for the vehicle, which burn liquid  methane and oxygen as propellants. Render of Landspaces forthcoming ZhuQue-3  rocket. (Credit: Landspace) 
A 10 km high-altitude flight test in September demonstrated the abilities of  one of these engines, including an engine relight before it made an accurate  landing within 1.2 m of the center of the landing pad. The second stage will  use a new Tianque-15B (TQ-15B) variant of the vacuum-optimized upper stage  engine flown on the ZhuQue-2E (ZQ-2E) maiden flight in late November.  Meanwhile, another ZQ-2E has been spotted in transport, suggesting the 
rockets next launch is not far away. 
Deep Blue Aerospace spent the final month of 2024 conducting half-system hot  fire testing of its LT-RS engine, which will be used on the forthcoming  two-stage Xingyun-1 (Nebula-1) rocket. The company conducted a VTVL test of  around 10 km at the Ejin Banner Spaceport in Inner Mongolia last September,  which included engine relight testing. An anomaly with an engine thrust servo  caused an early engine shutdown, leading to a hard landing and an explosion  that partially damaged the Nebula-M prototype. The company has yet to conduct  the 100 km follow-up test that was expected in November and is expected to be  working towards a maiden launch from the Hainan during the first half of 
2025. The 3.35 m diameter vehicle will be able to lift 2,000 kg to LEO, with  improvements planned to extend this payload capacity. Galactic Energys first  assembled Pallas-1. (Credit: Galactic Energy) 
Galactic Energys Pallas-1 is also expected to debut from Hainan in the first  half of 2025. Smaller than a Falcon 9 but similar in design, the 3.8 m  diameter, 42 m tall vehicle has a 4.2 m fairing and can lift 8,000 kg to LEO.  Initially expendable, the vehicle will eventually move towards achieving 
first stage reusability. The companys Gushenxing-1 rocket, also known as the  Ceres-1, conducted five successful missions last year, lofting 23 satellites  in total. Ceres-1 has flown once in 2025, with another three vehicles 
reported to be completed and ready for future missions. The upgraded  Gushenxing-2 is also expected to make its debut this year. The new vehicle  will have significantly more payload capacity at 1,600 kg to LEO and, like 
its predecessor, will conduct land and sea launches. 
Space Pioneers Tianlong 3 could also make its debut later this year. The  company has continued to work on ground-stage equipment as it recovers from  last Junes anomalous static fire test. The new vehicle may debut from the 
same Jiuquan site from which the companys Tianlong-2 completed its first and  only launch in April 2023. Render of Space Pioneers Tianlong-3. (Credit: 
Space Pioneer) 
Beijing-based Space Epoch continues to develop its 64 m tall stainless steel  Yuanxingzhe-1 (YXZ-1) rocket. The vehicle will also use a Longyun engine,  which burns liquid methane and liquid oxygen and completed a 20-second static  fire in early December. The prototype is expected to conduct a VTVL test with  a splashdown in the Yellow Sea in the coming weeks. 
Three other companies spent the final months of 2024 conducting engine 
testing for new vehicles that are said to be making debuts this year.  OrienSpace tested the gas generator of its YuanLi-110 engine in late 
December, which burns liquid kerosene and liquid oxygen as propellants. The  YuanLi-110 will feature an upgrade in thrust compared to the YuanLi-85, which  began to roll off the production line almost a year ago. Nine of these 
engines will power the first stage of its Gravity-2 rocket, enabling it to  carry 21,500 kg to LEO when expended and 17,400 kg when the stage is 
recovered for reuse. Plans for the 60 m tall vehicle include the potential 
for strap-on side boosters, further increasing its capacity. 
i-Space, also known as Interstellar Glory, is expected to test a prototype of  its forthcoming Hyperbola-3 medium-lift rocket in the spring. However, it  remains uncertain if the vehicle will debut before the end of the year. The  company recently completed hot fire tests of its JD-2 engine in late 
December. These follow successful long-duration tests last summer lasting 100  and 200 seconds. The engine burns liquid methane and liquid oxygen and is  planned to give the new 42 m tall vehicle a payload capacity to LEO of 8,500  kg. Hyperbola-3s first mission is expected to be expendable, with later  missions adopting reusability and an offshore landing platform. Render of the  Hyperbola-3. (Credit: i-Space) 
CAS Space also conducted long-duration firings of its second stage engine in  late December for its forthcoming Lijian-2 rocket, also known as the  Kinetica-2. These followed thruster tests for the attitude control system the  month before. Unlike the solid propellants that power the Lijian-1, the  engines on the new rocket will burn liquid kerosene and liquid oxygen, which  are planned to be reusable in the future. 
Lijian-2, which stands 53 m tall and has a core with a 3.35 m diameter, could  fly as soon as September. The upgraded rocket is expected to carry 12,000 kg  into LEO or 7,800 kg into SSO, including missions to the Tiangong Space  Station. Last year, the company won one of two commercial cargo supply  contracts, and it plans to fly missions with the forthcoming QingZhou craft.  Render of the Lijian-2 (Kinetica-2) rocket. (Credit: CAS Space) 
Cosmoleap has shared more videos documenting progress on its Yueqian-1 
vehicle and infrastructure, which are similar to SpaceXs Starship and its  catch tower. In the latest video, the company performed short drop tests of a  test article onto the tower arms. The company has also shared a video of  thruster tests and moved its Flint One flight computer into the engineering  application development phase. 
The tests have demonstrated control over engine thrust, ignition, and  shutdown. Cosmoleap has suggested it is open to making this available to 
other companies in the commercial low-altitude electric vertical takeoff and  landing (eVTOL) market. Many Chinese companies are already well-developed in  this sector, with a few working toward passenger certification as soon as  2027. COSMOLEAP testing the catch mechanism 
https://t.co/VG0qrWUZmd  pic.twitter.com/XCb61TCBFL 
 China 'N Asia Spaceflight  (@CNSpaceflight) January 17, 2025 
 
 Recent Chinese launches 
 Chang Zheng-3B/E | Shijian 25 
Chinas first launch of 2025 took place from the Xichang Satellite Launch  Center on Jan. 6 at 20:00 UTC. A Chang Zheng 3B/E carried a single technical  demonstration spacecraft, Shijian 25, into a geostationary transfer orbit. 
The Shijian 25 craft, which can carry up to 1,300 kg of propellant, will  conduct satellite refueling tests to extend their operational lifespan. The  Shijian missions, whose name translates to practice, have conducted numerous  experiments, including the relocation of satellites. 
This mission marked the 555th launch for the Chang Zheng family and was the  first of more than ten planned missions for the Chang Zhang 3 series this  year. 
 Jielong-3 | 10 x CentiSpace-1 
The first sea launch from China occurred on Jan. 13 at 03:00 UTC from the  Dongfang Hangtiangang Sea platform in the Yellow Sea. Ten Future Navigation  CentiSpace-1 satellites were launched into a 650 km LEO aboard a Jielong-3  rocket. 
Future Navigation will provide a range of navigation and surveying services  once the constellation has at least 20 CentiSpace-1 satellites operational.  The company aims to grow the constellation to 190. Future Navigation will 
also offer sub-meter positioning accuracy as low as 10 cm from the 
satellites, which will benefit from inter-satellite communications. 
Various engine and vehicle optimizations enabled the Jielong-3 to carry 100 
kg more than previous missions, increasing its capacity to LEO to 1,600 kg.  Liftoff at 03:00UTC on January 13, Smart Dragon 3 Y5 launched CentiSpace-01, 
a group of 10 LEO positioning and navigation satellites, from the sea near  Haiyang 
https://t.co/GpyRL2t5A4 pic.twitter.com/nHsvBnUHX1 
 China 'N Asia Spaceflight  (@CNSpaceflight) January 13, 2025 
 
 Chang Zheng 2D | PRSC-E01 
A Chang Zheng 2D (CZ-2D) launched a Pakistani remote sensing satellite and 
two others on Jan. 17 at 04:07 UTC. The CZ-2D utilized four grid fins, which  provided attitude control during descent. Lifting off from Site 9402, also  known as pad SLS-2, in the south complex of the Jiuquan Satellite Launch  Center, the vehicle deployed the three satellites into SSO. 
The primary payload was the Pakistan Remote Sensing Satellite Electro-Optical  1 (PAK-E01) observation satellite, built for the Pakistan Space and Upper  Atmosphere Research Commission (SUPARCO). This multi-spectral electro-optical  monitoring satellite will produce very high-resolution images in near  real-time. 
Also onboard was Lantan-1, also known as Blue Carbon 1. Built by GeeSpace, it  will perform ocean monitoring and marine management. The other rideshare  satellite was the weather monitoring Tianlu-1 (DAO-1). Galactic Energys  Gushenxing-1 (Ceres-1) rocket launches on Jan. 20. (Credit: Galactic Energy) 
 Gushenxing-1 | On Your Shoulders 
A Gushenxing-1, or Ceres 1, rocket launched from Site 95A at the Jiuquan  Satellite Launch Center at 10:11 UTC on Jan. 20. The vehicle carried five  payloads into a 535 km SSO, including four Yunyao-1 meteorological satellites  (numbered 37-40), building out a constellation which will grow to 80 in 
total. Also onboard was the Jitianxing A-05 optical remote sensing satellite,  which will perform environmental monitoring. 
This mission served as the 17th flight of the four-stage Gushenxing-1 rocket. 
 (Featured image: Longxing-2 takes flight during a 75 km high-altitude VTVL  test. Credit:SpaceLens ) 
 
The post China Roundup: Chang Zheng 8A set for debut, Chinese hopper flies 75  km high-altitude test appeared first on NASASpaceFlight.com .
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Link to news story: 
https://www.nasaspaceflight.com/2025/01/china-roundup-012225/
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