Tech to help minimize hazards for carrier rocket's trajectory

Watching a giant rocket blast off and roar heavenward is an unforgettable experience for most people. But for those located far from the launchpad and under the path of trajectory, rockets are a source of concern as debris might fall to the ground.

Tech to help minimize hazards for carrier rocket's trajectory

Chinese engineers have begun developing a technology that will help minimize hazards for those below a carrier rocket’s trajectory and also enable rockets to be reused, according to project leaders at the China Academy of Launch Vehicle Technology, the country’s major carrier rocket maker.

During China’s latest rocket launch on Friday from Xichang Satellite Launch Center in Sichuan province, researchers from the academy conducted the country’s first successful controlled-descent test of a major part of the rocket, He Wei, a senior rocket scientist.

They installed a set of devices known as grid fins-foldable, adjustable heat-resistant wings-between the first and second stage of a Long March 2C liquid-propelled carrier rocket.

After the 23-meter-tall first stage burned up its fuel and separated from the second stage, the grid fins were unfolded and began to steer the first stage as it fell back from the edge of space through the Earth’s atmosphere, He said.

The scientist said that thanks to the grid fins, debris from the first stage returned to a designated area in Guizhou province, adding that the test showed that China has become the second nation after the United States to possess controlled-descent technology for carrier rockets.

Cui Zhaoyun, deputy chief designer of the Long March 2C, said Friday’s test was a challenge for researchers of the grid fin because compared with small rockets, it is more difficult to fulfill controlled reentry of large models like the Long March 2C.

Xing Qiang, founder of Micro-Rocket Union, a nonprofit space research organization in Beijing, said that grid fin technology has been widely adopted on carrier rockets and weapons such as ballistic missiles for a long time. But before Friday’s test, it had only been used by the US’ SpaceX for controlled descents.

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