The most thrilling three hours before the launch of Long March 5 rocket
Updated: 2016-11-07 14:36
By Jin Dan(chinadaily.com.cn)
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China's newly-developed heavy-lift carrier rocket Long March 5 is in transit at the Wenchang Space Launch Center in South China's Hainan Province, Oct 28, 2016.[Photo/Xinhua] |
This was the first time that the team used liquid hydrogen as propellant on such a large scale in China's rocket launch history. And the environment-friendly hydrogen oxygen engine is also a new innovative Made-in-China achievement.
"It's widely viewed that the performance of hydrogen oxygen engine is key to the successful launch," said Wang Weibin, deputy chief designer of Long March 5 rocket.
In past two decades, his team has made 114 tests of the engine, seen many losses, big and small. One shot by the end of 2012 was unforgettable to him as the explosion buried the whole engine into scraps.
"The maiden flight of Long March 5 was really a big test for us," said Wang.
The Long March 5 is a large, two-stage rocket with a payload capacity of 25 tonnes to low-Earth orbit and 14 tons to geostationary transfer orbit, the largest of China's carrier rockets. Its carrying capacity is about 2.5 times that of the current main model Long March carrier rockets.
It took great difficulties and high risks to bring this bulky model into reality. The feasibility study took about 20 years and the research and development (R&D) took another 10 years, so it reached the space later than its "successor" Long March 6 and Long March 7 though its research was initiated earlier than them.
But it was a time-worthy effort. As many as 247 new key technologies with independent intellectual property rights were applied to it.
Its design is also more complicated than other Long March rockets. The components used for this model reached more than 100,000 while the previous models required tens of thousands of components at most. The designing task is 2.5 times more than the previous work. More than 7000 tests were made in over 1000 ground experiments during its R&D, which also dwarfed the previous attempts, according to Li Dong, chief designer of Long March-5.
With the heavy-lift carrier rocket, China can build a permanent manned space station and explore the moon and Mars.
An undated photo shows technicans work on the heavy-lift carrier rocket Long March 5. [Photo/Xinhua] |
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