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Space Science

South Korea Launches Satellite With Its Own Rocket for the First Time (nytimes.com) 22

South Korea said it successfully launched a small but working satellite into orbit using its first homemade rocket on Tuesday, bringing the country closer to its dream of becoming a new player in the space industry and deploying its own spy satellites to better monitor North Korea. From a report: The three-stage Nuri rocket, built by the government's Korea Aerospace Research Institute together with hundreds of local companies, blasted off from the Naro Space Center in Goheung on the southwestern tip of South Korea at 4 p.m. Tuesday. Seventy minutes after the liftoff, South Korea announced that Nuri had succeeded in its mission of thrusting a 357-pound working satellite, as well as a 1.3-ton dummy satellite, into orbit 435 miles above the Earth.
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South Korea Launches Satellite With Its Own Rocket for the First Time

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  • "as well as a 1.3-ton dummy satellite"

    I'm curious as to the orbital decay of that dummy satellite. Otherwise it sounds like more hazardous space junk? And an expensive add on to the flight.

    • by brunes69 ( 86786 )

      They are trying to test launch capabilities, and ability to successfully fling something heavy into orbit is part of the test.

      Spending tens of millions building a 1.3 ton *real* sat when you are not confident in success now that would be a waste.

    • One large (easily tracked) inert object on a known orbit isn't really significant on the scale of dangerous junk.
  • ...against North Korea for the first Inter Continental Ballistic Missile.

  • So the Korean scientists whipped it up their garage like an Apple. This reflects the bigotry of the west. Getting payload to space is extremely difficult. This is not Salvage 1.
  • Space is really hard. I want to congratulate the people at KARI (Korea Aerospace Research Institute) on this monumental achievement of engineering and perseverance. Awesome work!
  • by Areyoukiddingme ( 1289470 ) on Tuesday June 21, 2022 @03:28PM (#62640360)

    This is the second flight of the rocket after the third stage failed during a test flight last fall resulting in the payload not reaching orbit.

    Its nominal payload capacity is 2600 kg. For comparison, the Falcon 1's payload to the same altitude was roughly 600 kg. (Altitude matters and there's no standard for specifying capacity to LEO, so that's an approximation.)

    Looks like South Korea has a winner, and a bona fide space program, making them roughly the 11th country to do so, depending on how you count it. I'm inclined to credit them with being the 10th, since that doesn't count ESA (which isn't a country but should count), and does count Iran and North Korea, both of whom used Soviet-era Russian designs and so shouldn't count. (And in fact Iran used North Korea's variant of that Russian design.)(And Iran's capability is completely defunct after an explosion on the pad in 2019, which has never been restored.) New Zealand's Rocket Lab launches aren't counted because Rocket Lab New Zealand is a wholly owned subsidiary of an American company.

    In order of independent achievement of orbit:

    • Soviet Union
    • United States
    • France
    • Japan
    • China
    • United Kingdom (from an Australian launch pad)
    • ESA (basically a joint French/German rocket, the beginning of the Ariane series)
    • India
    • Israel
    • South Korea

    It's a pretty short list nearly a quarter of the way through the 21st century.

    • Rocket Lab achieved space with its sounding rocket Atea in 2009, 4 years before it became a US company (which it did for the US government contracts and funding purposes).

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