China's LinkSpace plans to send a rocket into space and land it safely in
late 2022, three years after the startup's last major test.
The company announced Thursday (May 5) that it had carried out a static fire
test of its Reusable Launch Vehicle T6 (RLV-T6) rocket using new
methane-fueled engines at a site in Jiangyin, Jiangsu Province.
The rocket will later be transported to Lenghu in the northwestern Chinese
province of Qinghai, the site of LinkSpace's earlier tests. The team aims to
launch the 47.5-foot-tall (14.5 meters) RLV-T6 to an altitude of around 62
miles (100 kilometers) and land it safely using landing legs and grid fins,
similar to the way that the first stage of SpaceX's Falcon 9 rocket touches
down.
That altitude would take the rocket to the Kármán line, one definition of
the boundary between Earth's atmosphere and outer space. The flight will
also involve high-altitude environment, biological and other experiments,
according to a LinkSpace press release (in
Chinese).
The development, and moves toward what would be the highest-altitude Chinese
reusable launch and landing test to date, follow a long period of apparent
inactivity for the company.
LinkSpace was founded in 2014, around the time that China's government made
a major policy shift to open up its previously closed space sector to
private capital.
Inspired by the progress of SpaceX and Blue Origin in reusable rocketry,
LinkSpace developed test articles for vertical takeoff, vertical landing
(VTVL) tests.
The team performed two such tests in 2019 with its RLV-T5 rocket, powered by
ethanol and liquid oxygen, the same propellant combination used by old
German V2 rockets. The latter 2019
test
soared to just over 984 feet (300 meters) and aced the landing.
But after signing a deal for new, more powerful methane-liquid oxygen
engines from a fellow Chinese space startup, LinkSpace went quiet, for
reasons unknown.
The reemergence began last year. LinkSpace posted a recruitment notice in
March 2021, then announced in November that it had tested its own,
independently developed Fengbao-1 methane-liquid oxygen engine for future
suborbital launch and landing tests. A number of the same engines will power
the RLV-T6 for its launch and landing attempt.
LinkSpace is not the only Chinese startup developing reusable rockets,
however, meaning the company faces competition not only for reaching
milestones but also for launch contracts.
Deep Blue Aerospace, founded in 2017, performed its own, successful VTVL
test in October last year, reaching an altitude of 328 feet (100 m) as part
of the development of the reusable Nebula 1 rocket. Higher altitude tests
are planned this year.
Other Chinese private companies working on reusability include Galactic
Energy, iSpace, Space Pioneer and Space Transportation. Landspace, which is
preparing to launch its expendable Zhuque 2 methane-liquid oxygen powered
rocket in the near future, plans to make the launcher reusable in the
future, while CAS Space is working on its answer to Blue Origin's New
Shepard suborbital rocket for tourism.
Reusability has caught on with China's state-owned main space contractor,
too. It plans to make the Long March 8 reusable and has committed to making
the first stage of its new human-rated rocket reusable.
Source: Link
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Space & Astrophysics