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Hyperbola-1

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Chinese satellite launch vehicle
Hyperbola-1
FunctionLaunch vehicle
Manufactureri-Space
Country of originChina
Cost per launchUS$5 million
Size
Height24 m (79 ft)
Diameter1.4 m (4 ft 7 in)
Mass42,000 kg (93,000 lb)
Stages4
Capacity
Payload toLow Earth orbit
Mass520 kg (1,150 lb)
Payload toSSO
Mass300 kg (660 lb)
Associated rockets
ComparableCeres-1,Minotaur IV
Launch history
StatusActive
Launch sitesJSLC
Total launches8
Success(es)4
Failure4
Partial failure0
First flight25 July 2019
Last flight29 July 2025
First stage
Powered by1Solid
Maximum thrust770 kilonewtons (170,000 lbf)
Burn time56 seconds
PropellantSolid
Second stage
Powered by1Solid
Maximum thrust597 kilonewtons (134,000 lbf)
Burn time60 seconds
PropellantSolid
Third stage
Powered by1Solid
Maximum thrust195 kilonewtons (44,000 lbf)
Burn time56 seconds
PropellantSolid
Fourth stage
Powered by1Solid
Maximum thrust60 kilonewtons (13,000 lbf)
Burn time50 seconds
PropellantSolid

TheHyperbola-1 (akaShuang Quxian-1,SQX-1) (Chinese:双曲线一号) rocket is 20.8 m (68 ft) tall, 1.4 m (4 ft 7 in) in diameter and weighs 31 t (34 tons). It consists of four all solid fuel stages, guided by liquid fuel attitude control engines.[1] It can launch 300 kg (660 lb) intolow Earth orbit (LEO).[2] The rocket might be based on Chinese military missiles (perhapsDF-11 orDF-15). The first stage of the rocket is equipped with fourgrid fins.[1] The launch price is reported around US$5 million.[3]

History

[edit]

The successful maiden flight was on 25 July 2019, at 05:00UTC fromJiuquan Satellite Launch Center.[4] It launched from a movable supporting platform.[3] It placed numerous payloads,[5] among them the CAS-7B amateur radio satellite, into orbit 300 km (190 mi) aboveEarth. CAS-7B decayed from orbit 6 August 2019.[6] It was the first Chinese private company to achieve orbit (orbital launches of other private companies before had failed).[7]

A second launch occurred on 1 February 2021, at 08:15 UTC (16:15 Beijing Time) fromJiuquan Satellite Launch Center with 6 unidentified satellites but failed to reach orbit.[8] A subsequent investigation revealed that a piece of insulation had broken off and got stuck in the turning mechanism ofgrid fin Number IV. When the piece was blown away, the control system then suddenly overcompensated, resulting in the rocket being ripped apart by excessive aerodynamic forces.[9] The rocket was named "Tianshu" because its outer fuselage was covered with the artistic creations (images of compound made-up Chinese characters) of the contemporary artist Xu Bing.[8]

iSpace launched a third Hyperbola-1 solid-rocket vehicle on 3 August 2021.[10]SpaceNews was reporting the same day that the outcome of the launch was unknown, but that amateur video of the launch had been posted, but then deleted from Chinese social media.[10] After most of the day had passed, the Chinese official mediaXinhua reported that the launch was unsuccessful due to off-nominal performance of the rocket which resulted in a failure to achieve orbit.[11] An official statement released by the company itself the following day clarified that the failure was caused by a malfunctioning in the fairing separation process, that precluded the payload from reaching the target orbit. A fourth launch attempt on May 13, 2022, was unsuccessful as well.[9]

In April 2023, i-Space performed a fifth launch of the Hyperbola-1 which successfully reached orbit without a payload ,[12] and then followed with another launch on 17 December 2023 that placed the DEAR-1 satellite from Chinese company Azspace into a 500 kilometreSSO orbit.[13]

Launches

[edit]

The following table indicates the launches to date:[14][15][16]

Flight numberLaunch vehicleSerial numberDate (UTC)Launch sitePayloadOrbitResults
1Hyperbola-1Y125 July 2019

05:00

LS-95A,JSLCCAS-7B
Hangtian KKG Fazhang sat
LEOSuccess
2Hyperbola-1Y21 February 2021

08:15

LS-95A,JSLCundisclosed payloadsSSOFailure
3Hyperbola-1Y53 August 2021

07:39

LS-95B,JSLCJilin-1 Mofang-01ASSOFailure
4Hyperbola-1Y413 May 2022

07:09

LS-95B,JSLCJilin-1 Mofang-01A (R)
Golden Bauhinia-1 04
SSOFailure
5Hyperbola-1Y67 April 2023

04:00

LS-95A,JSLCLianyungang (Dummy Payload)SSOSuccess
6Hyperbola-1Y717 December 2023

07:00

LS-95A,JSLCLiangxi-1 (DEAR-1)SSOSuccess
7Hyperbola-1Y811 July 2024

07:00

LS-95A,JSLCYunyao-1 15-17SSOFailure
8Hyperbola-1Y1029 July 2025

04:11

LS-95A,JSLCKunpeng-03SSOSuccess

References

[edit]
  1. ^ab"星际荣耀".www.i-space.com.cn. Retrieved2024-06-02.
  2. ^""双曲线一号S火箭"首飞成功!星际荣耀近期型谱计划出炉! | 航天爱好者网". 2018-04-08. Archived fromthe original on 2018-04-08. Retrieved2024-06-02.
  3. ^ab"Chinese Private-Sector Company Launches a History-Making Rocket".Engineering.com. Retrieved2024-06-02.
  4. ^Huang, Echo (2019-07-25)."A private Chinese space firm successfully launched a rocket into orbit".Quartz. Retrieved2024-06-02.
  5. ^Todd, David (2019-07-25)."Chinese commercial launch firm iSpace launches cubesats on its Hyperbola-1 rocket".Seradata. Retrieved2024-06-02.
  6. ^"Technical details for satellite CAS 7B".N2YO.com - Real Time Satellite Tracking and Predictions. Retrieved2024-06-02.
  7. ^"Chinese private company reaches orbit for first time – Spaceflight Now". Retrieved2024-06-02.
  8. ^abBergin, Chris (2021-02-01)."Chinese Hyperbola-1 rocket fails during its second launch".NASASpaceFlight.com. Retrieved2024-06-02.
  9. ^abMooney, Justin (2022-05-13)."Hyperbola-1, China's first privately-owned rocket, fails in 2nd consecutive return to flight mission".NASASpaceFlight.com. Retrieved2024-06-02.
  10. ^abJones, Andrew (2021-08-03)."Mystery surrounds Chinese private rocket launch attempt".SpaceNews. Retrieved2024-06-02.
  11. ^"Flight test of China's commercial carrier rocket fails - Xinhua | English.news.cn".www.xinhuanet.com. Retrieved2024-06-02.
  12. ^Jones, Andrew (2023-11-02)."China's iSpace launches and lands rocket test stage".SpaceNews. Retrieved2024-06-02.
  13. ^"我国成功发射双曲线一号商业运载火箭-新闻-上海证券报·中国证券网".news.cnstock.com. Retrieved2024-06-02.
  14. ^"Shuang Quxian-1 (SQX-1, Hyperbola-1)".Gunter's Space Page. Retrieved2024-06-02.
  15. ^"我国成功发射双曲线一号商业运载火箭".Shanghai Securities News. 17 December 2023. Retrieved17 December 2023.
  16. ^"刚刚, "梁溪号"卫星发射升空!".sohu.com. 17 December 2023. Retrieved18 December 2023.
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