Failed to slide, Japanese rocket ended ruined

 


Prime H3 Prime launch, Japan's latest rocket rocket, is not expected. The fate of the 200 miliar yen  ends.

The Japanese Japanese body reported that about 15 minutes after the Landas on Tuesday (7/3) local time, the control mission space issued a rocket crushing order.


"The crushing order was sent around 10:52 (Japanese time), as it was not possible to achieve the mission," Jaxa said as quoted from CNN.



The second stage of the H3 rocket does not turn on. The last rocket of the Tanegashima Space Center in southern Japan, brought the Advance Land Observation Satellite-3 (Alos-3), a remedy and land mapping that Jaxa was planned as a sophisticated aids for disaster recurrence.


"Alos-3 will cover all lands not only Japan but also around the world," Jaxa said.


Tuesday (7/3) launches are the second effort of Jaxa to send H3 to space. Earlier, on February 17, the two secondary driving machines mounted on the side of the space vehicle did not light up on the launch and H3 failed.


Jaxa says H3 is a Japanese H-2A and H-2B rocket successor, with a flexible configuration based on what is needed to be lifted to orbit. H3 is a government and commercial mission.




H3 is advised as a more economical rocket than other launches, for leveraging components that are produced by domestic industries such as the Japanese car industry, not exclusive products for space use.


"With some configurations, the H3 offers the right work and price for the purpose of each satellite. We aim to create an operating world where the Japanese industry can be supported by continuing to launch H3 six times or more every year for 20 years," Jaxa hoped.

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