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The H3 rocket test flight No.2 blasts off from the Tanegashima Space Center on Tanegashima Island in the southwestern prefecture of Kagoshima, Japan. Photo: Xinhua

Japan successfully launches H3 rocket, a year after failed debut

  • Saturday’s success is a major boost for Japan’s space programme as the country struggles to stay competitive in the global space race
  • In its debut flight last March, the rocket had to be destroyed along with its payload
Japan

Japan’s space agency toasted a successful blast-off for its new flagship rocket on Saturday, making it third time lucky after years of delays and two previous failed attempts.

The next-generation H3 has been mooted as a rival to SpaceX’s Falcon 9, and could one day deliver cargo to bases on the Moon.

“I’ve been in the space industry for a long time, but I’ve never felt so happy before, and I’ve never felt so relieved,” said Hiroshi Yamakawa, president of space agency JAXA.

The latest launch follows Japan’s successful landing last month of an unmanned probe on the Moon – albeit at a wonky angle – making it just the fifth country to land a craft on the lunar surface.

“So happy to see this incredible accomplishment in the space sector that follows on from the success of the SLIM moon landing,” Prime Minister Fumio Kishida said in a post on X.

The H3 rocket, built by Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Ltd. for Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA), lifts up at Tanegashima Space Center on Friday. Photo: Bloomberg

The H3 launched from the Tanegashima Space Center in southwestern Japan at 9:22am local time.

Cheers and applause could be heard from the JAXA control centre after the agency’s live stream announced the H3’s engines had successfully burned, meaning the rocket had made it into orbit.

Developed jointly by JAXA and Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, the H3 is the successor to the H-IIA launch system, which debuted in 2001.

Designed for “high flexibility, high reliability, and high cost performance”, the craft will “maintain Japan’s autonomous access to space”, JAXA says.

Unlike the reusable Falcon 9, the H3 is expendable, but scientists say the trial of its world-first technology is significant.

Japan ‘Moon Sniper’ lands but power running low, space agency says

“The H3 rocket has a unique and novel first-stage engine that delivers greater thrust compared to state-of-the-art rockets,” said Michele Trenti, director of the Melbourne Space Laboratory at the University of Melbourne.

The H3 “has the potential to be the most cost-effective rocket”, making the exploration of the solar system more affordable.

Its maiden launch has been beset by mishaps.

A February 2023 launch was abandoned after ignition issues left the rocket standing motionless on the ground.

On the second try in March last year, technical problems meant a destruct command was issued shortly after blast-off.

Even this latest launch was postponed by four days due to bad weather.

02:42

The company using cow dung to fuel Japan’s space ambitions

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The rocket which took off successfully on Saturday was carrying two small satellites.

One of the microsatellites is expected to contribute to disaster prevention by taking photos and videos.

The other, equipped with a sensor to detect infrared rays, is intended to track the operation conditions of factories on the ground.

Separation of the microsatellites was also confirmed, according to JAXA’s live stream.

“We will keep analysing the sequences after successfully putting the rocket into orbit,” a JAXA official said.

H3 will be “an all-rounder – able to launch satellites into Earth orbit, serve as a supply vehicle for space stations, and go to the Moon”, said associate professor Alice Gorman, a space exploration expert at Flinders University.

The successful launch bolsters JAXA’s reputation after a string of failures, including of a different rocket, a solid-fuel model called the Epsilon-6.

Image taken by a Lunar Excursion Vehicle 2 (LEV-2) of a robotic moon rover called Smart Lander for Investigating Moon, or SLIM, on the moon. Photo: JAXA/Takara Tomy/Sony Group Corporation/Doshisha University via AP, File

Japan succeeded in landing its SLIM spacecraft nicknamed “Moon Sniper” on the lunar surface last month, although the craft’s solar panels were facing the wrong way.

Despite recent failures, overall, Japan’s space programme punches above its weight, said Adrian Michael Cruise, an honorary professor of astrophysics at the University of Birmingham.

The country “has future ambitions for space exploration challenging some of the major players”, he said.

“However, space payloads are getting heavier and heavier, and to remain competitive in the missions it can mount, Japan needs access to more powerful launch vehicles, like H3.”

Additional reporting by Reuters, Associated Press

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