Advertisement
Science
ChinaScience

China’s satellite engine smashes record, leaves US rival far behind

Forced to develop the technology from scratch, a Chinese team says it achieved 14 hours of continuous operation in space

2-MIN READ2-MIN
1
Listen
A communications satellite equipped with the 750 newton test engine takes off from the Wenchang launch site in southern China on board a modified version of the Long March-7 rocket on June 23. Photo: Xinhua
Ling Xinin Ohio
China has tested a satellite engine with a record-breaking operating life, a key technology that could help propel the world’s largest communications, military and deep-space spacecraft into their intended orbits faster and more reliably.

The upgraded engine, developed by the China Academy of Aerospace Propulsion Technology in Xian, can produce 750 newtons of thrust, according to Chinese media reports.

The Chinese engine fired for 11,617 seconds – 3.2 hours – across five orbit-raising manoeuvres during its maiden flight in late June, placing Communications Technology Experiment Satellite 26A into orbit about 35,800km (22,000 miles) above Earth.

The engine, which was designed to run for nearly 10 hours, operated continuously for more than 14 hours during testing, thanks to a novel heat- and oxidation-resistant coating, the reports said.

In contrast, the leading engines currently used to raise spacecraft into their final orbit after launch, including the US-made R-42DM and Europe’s Leros-1B, are typically designed to operate for about seven hours.

03:54
The race for the moon’s south pole: can China beat Nasa’s 2028 deadline?

The extra operating time did not come at the expense of performance, according to the reports.

Advertisement
Select Voice
Select Speed
1.00x