Japan develops a low-cost mini space rocket with Canon


Japan develops a low-cost mini space rocket with Canon



The project will use the company's experience to design smaller and lighter control instruments with the aim of creating the smallest satellite launch vehicle in the world




   The Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) is leading the construction of a low-cost mini space rocket with the help of Japan's technological manufacturer Canon, the Nikkei business daily revealed on Friday. The project will use the manufacturing experience to design smaller and lighter control instruments in order to create the smallest satellite launch vehicle in the world.

   The three-stage rocket, 52 centimeters in diameter and less than 10 meters high, will be an improved version of the JAXA SS-520 two-stage model, and launching it will cost less than a tenth of the cost of a conventional launch. The Japanese space agency, which announced the project on November 20, plans to use the device to put into orbit micro-satellites, and plans to perform a first test launch of the rocket in early 2017 from the Uchinoura Space Center, in the prefecture. of Kagoshima (southwest).

Canon joins the private companies of the Asian country that seek to enter a sector dominated by the Government -about 90 percent of the sales of the Japanese space industry, estimated at about 300,000 million yen (2,460 million euros / 2,630 million dollars), correspond to the public sector.

The meteorological observing or defense satellites in use are normally of large dimensions and are commissioned by the Administration, but in recent years the development of smaller devices created by private companies for use in traffic control or for the control of traffic has increased. geographical study.

It is expected that the demand for rockets capable of transporting this type of devices will increase, as well as that of the aerospace sector in general, for which companies such as the travel agency HIS or the parent company of the airline All Nippon Airways (ANA), ANA Holdings , have been involved in this field, picked up Nikkei. Both have announced that they will invest in PD Aerospace, a startup in Nagoya (center) that works in manned spacecraft, and intends to carry out its first commercial space flight in 2023.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

The Zowi robot from BQ is already 'made in Spain'

Bose develops headphones with white noise specifically for sleep

Benefits and Challenges of Data Center Consolidation