April 30
China aims to recover the first stage of the Long March-8
carrier rocket, which is still under development and is expected
to make its maiden flight around 2021, according to a Chinese
rocket expert.
It was part of China's endeavors to develop reusable space
vehicles, Long Lehao, chief designer of carrier rockets at the
China Academy of Launch Vehicle Technology, told a space
conference in Harbin, capital of northeast China's Heilongjiang
Province.
The Long March-8 rocket will have two stages and two boosters:
the first stage and boosters are expected to be retrieved
through vertical landing, said Long, who is also an academician
of the Chinese Academy of Engineering.
If successful, the new rocket would provide commercial launch
services to customers around the globe, Long said.
"China's aerospace industry is making efforts to develop
low-cost vehicles that can enter space rapidly to support future
large-scale space exploration and promote a commercial space
industry," Long said.
Bao Weimin, director of the Science and Technology Commission of
the China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation and an
academician of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, said China's
reusable carrier vehicle will use technologies different from
those of U.S. commercial space firm SpaceX.
"As the current Long March 2, 3, 4 series rockets are fueled by
toxic propellants, they cannot be recycled. But we are
developing technologies to precisely control the fall of the
rocket remains to ensure safety," Long said.
That effort is important as residents in possible landing areas
have to be evacuated at every launch. As China's aerospace
activities become more frequent, with 36 launches planned this
year, precise control of falling rocket remains could save a lot
of trouble.
Long also introduced the development roadmap for China's space
transportation system.
Around 2025, reusable suborbital carriers will be successfully
developed and suborbital space travel will be realized. Around
2030, rockets with two reusable stages will be developed. Around
2035, carrier rockets will be completely reusable which could
realize the dream of space travel for ordinary people.
A future generation of carrier rockets will be put into use
around 2040 and hybrid-power reusable carriers will be
developed. Space vehicles will be more diverse, intelligent,
reliable, low-cost, efficient and convenient.
"Those targets are not easy to achieve, and lots of
technological difficulties must be solved," Long said.