China’s lunar rocket test marks milestone in bringing astronauts to moon
China completes critical test of Long March-10 rocket, which will play key role in building scientific research base at lunar south pole

“The test confirmed the engines could run in sync under both normal and high-power conditions, and yielded a full set of data,” the agency said.
Standing 92 metres (302 feet) tall, the Long March-10 will lift off with a total of 21 YF-100K engines – seven on the first stage and seven on each of two boosters – giving it about three times the thrust of the Long March-5, China’s most powerful rocket today.
The superheavy launcher can deliver 27 tonnes to a trans-lunar orbit. Under current plans, two Long March-10 rockets will launch the crewed Mengzhou spacecraft and the Lanyue lander separately, with the two vehicles rendezvousing in lunar orbit ahead of a landing attempt by 2030.