China

China is Trying to Stop its Boosters From Randomly Crashing Into Villages

China’s space program has advanced by leaps and bounds in a relatively short time. However, it has suffered some bad publicity in recent years due to certain “uncontrolled reentries” (aka. crashes). On multiple occasions, spent first stages have fallen back to Earth, posing a potential threat to populated areas and prompting backlash from NASA and the ESA, who claimed China was taking “unnecessary risks.” To curb the risk caused by spent first stages, China has developed a parachute system that can guide fallen rocket boosters to predetermined landing zones.

According to the Chinese Academy of Launch Vehicle Technology (CALT), which developed the system, the system was successfully tested on a Long March-3B (CZ-3B) rocket on Friday, June 9th. As they indicated in their statement, a review of the test data and an in-situ analysis of the debris showed that the parachute system helped narrow the range of the landing area by 80%. This could help pave the way for future parachute landing control technology applications, which could allow for controlled reentry, retrieval, and even reusability.

A Long March-2FT1 carrier rocket blasts off from the launch pad at the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center. Credit: Xinhua/Wang Jianmin

The system was tested on a CZ-3B rocket that launched from the Xichang Satellite Launch Center on May 17th, carrying a BeiDou-3 G4 navigation satellite into orbit. The system contains an electrical subsystem optimized to reduce its volume and overall weight (30 kg; 66 lbs) to make it more practical. It is also designed to automatically deploy its parafoil at a certain altitude, guiding the booster back to a designated landing area. The integration of this system into the CZ-3 and CZ-5 rocket family should give mission teams more precise control over where spent rocket boosters land and improve security around launch sites.

These concerns are especially important given that most of China’s major launch sites are located deep inland, making it more difficult to predict where spent boosters will fall after sending payloads to orbit. In the U.S., major launch facilities are mostly located in coastal areas, such as Cape Canaveral (Florida), SpaceX Starport (Boca Chica, Texas), the Wallops Flight Facility (Virginia), and Vanderburg Air Force Base (California), or remote areas like the New Mexico desert (Spaceport America), and West Texas (Blue Origin’s Launch Site One).

In previous statements, CALT researchers have also stated that they intend to make the first stage of the super-heavy Long March-9 (CZ-9) reusable. Chinese state media shared images of the first pieces of the rocket back in March, which included the 10-meter (~33-foot) storage and propellant tanks. A parachute system similar to the one developed by the CALT team could find its way into the second stage of the CZ-9 and possibly the payload fairings, leading to a fully-reusable launch vehicle.

Further Reading: CGTN

Matt Williams

Matt Williams is a space journalist and science communicator for Universe Today and Interesting Engineering. He's also a science fiction author, podcaster (Stories from Space), and Taekwon-Do instructor who lives on Vancouver Island with his wife and family.

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