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Japan's newest H-III NGLV development project (2014)

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Japan's newest H-III NGLV development project

Japan’s Office of National Space Policy has announced its intentions to build a new mainline space launch rocket to replace the highly-reliable H-II rocket, with the new rocket’s development set to Begin 2014, targeting a first launch around 2020. The primary goal of development is to drastically reduce the cost of rocket launches.
The Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency and Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Ltd. are drawing up plans to develop what they are tentatively calling the H-III rocket.


TOKYO, 2014, January -- The Japanese government has officially approved initial funding for a $1.9 billion effort to develop the H-III rocket, the designated replacement for the country’s current H-IIA workhorse launcher.

The H-III rocket could be configured with zero, two, four or six strap-on solid rocket boosters to lift heavier payloads into orbit, according to JAXA's current design concepts.
The basic configuration with no solid-fueled boosters could put up to 3 metric tons into a sun-synchronous orbit, a type of orbit often used by Earth imaging satellites.
The launcher's most powerful version, with six boosters, could put a 6.5 metric ton payload into geostationary transfer orbit, the drop-off point for communications satellites heading for operating positions 22,300 miles over the equator.
The H-III will stand about 60 meters tall and have a core stage powered by a new liquid-hydrogen/liquid oxygen main engine dubbed LE-9 and anywhere from two to six solid-fueled strap-on boosters. The solid-fueled boosters will be based closely on the M-34 second stage of Japan’s new Epsilon small rocket.
A new hydrogen-fueled LE-9 engine is in development for the first stage. Two of the engines, each generating about 300,000 pounds of thrust.

The LE-9 engine features an open expander cycle, in which hydrogen from the engine turbopump is diverted to the main combustion chamber's cooling channels and then used to drive the turbines before being injected into the combustion flow at the nozzle extension, according to a technical document produced by JAXA engineers.
Engineers say the open expander cycle, only used on upper stage engines up to now, allows the rocket engine to have a simpler design, reduces pressures and temperatures inside the engine, decreases heat on the turbines of the turbopump, and makes the engine more robust to failures.

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great ...
Japan, pls give us your outdated technology on rocket ... we just want to build rocket with range 2,000 km
 
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H-II B is a badass launcher , but it's not economic !

Cryogenic engines ... Stages with different diameters ... etc ... forcing JAXA to design a new generation of SLVs !

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great ...
Japan, pls give us your outdated technology on rocket ... we just want to build rocket with range 2,000 km

Rockets with the range of more than 300 km counting as strategic technology & transferring such a technology banned by MTCR !

The Missile Technology Control Regime (MTCR) is an informal and voluntary partnership between 34 countries to prevent the proliferation of missile and unmanned aerial vehicle technology capable of carrying a 500 kg payload at least 300 km.

But as we don't give a single shit about MTCR ... you can count on Iranians help ! ;)
 
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Japan is a space joke. Still hasn't put a man into space.


btw, what will the man do there ? sprout CCP propaganda ?

love that clean launch of that last rocket launch photo.....silver colored one.
 
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Japan is a space joke. Still hasn't put a man into space.

They are capitalism ... they don't need to race by all price ...
The Japanese astronaut travelled to space long time before Chinese

Mohri Mamoru, (born Jan. 29, 1948, Yoichi, Hokkaido, Japan), first Japanese astronaut to go into space. He flew as a payload specialist aboard the Spacelab-J mission of the U.S. space shuttle in September 1992.
mamoru-mohri.png


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Koichi Wakata Becomes First Japanese Astronaut To Command The International Space Station
By Charles Poladian@CharlieAllDayc.poladian@ibtimes.com
on March 09 2014 3:56 PM
koichi-wakata_0.jpg

Koichi Wakata will serve as the Expedition 39 Commander. NASA
Koichi Wakata is the first Japanese astronaut to command the International Space Station, following the departure of cosmonaut Oleg Kotov. On March 9, Expedition 38 Commander Kotov gave control of the space station to Wakata, who will serve as the new Expedition 39 Commander.

On Sunday, the change of command ceremony was performed and Kotov gave control of the ISS over to Japanese Aerospace and Exploration astronaut Wakata. Cosmonauts Kotov and Sergey Ryazanskiy along with NASA astronaut Mike Hopkins will depart from the ISS on March 10, completing their 166-day mission at the space station.

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Cosmonaut Oleg Kotov gave control of the International Space Station to JAXA astronaut Koichi Wakata on March 9. NASA
 
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Japan is a space joke. Still hasn't put a man into space.

Does it mean they can't !?

The heavy one is interesting. Not sure it will get done...

In Fact , a 5m core stage + two 5m strapons looks a little fat !

btw, what will the man do there ? sprout CCP propaganda ?

love that clean launch of that last rocket launch photo.....silver colored one.

It's beyond propaganda ... it's a perfect technological challenge !
 
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