Sun. Nov 24th, 2024

China’s Emulating SpaceX’s Designs to Build a Reusable Megarocket<!-- wp:html --><p>Tu Haichao/Xinhua via Getty Images</p> <p>Reusable rockets are all the rage now, apparently—and China seems to be hopping on the trend. <a href="https://spacenews.com/china-scraps-expendable-long-march-9-rocket-plan-in-favor-of-reusable-version/">According to <em>SpaceNews</em></a>, Liu Bing, the director of the general design department at the China Academy of Launch Vehicle Technology, confirmed that the country's newest rocket, the Long March 9, will feature a reusable first stage booster.</p> <p>The announcement was big enough to get a reaction from Chief Twit (and SpaceX founder and CEO) Elon Musk, who tweeted:</p> <p>As SpaceX has proven, reusing rockets can slash <a href="https://qz.com/2040243/elon-musks-spacex-saved-nasa-500-million">launch costs by millions</a>, allowing funds to be directed toward research, innovation, and (of course) more launches. <a href="https://spacenews.com/china-scraps-expendable-long-march-9-rocket-plan-in-favor-of-reusable-version/">Critics of NASA’s Space Launch System</a>, which is set to debut <a href="https://www.thedailybeast.com/nasa-delays-the-artemis-i-moon-mission-because-of-tropical-storm-ian">whenever the hell Artemis I ends up launching</a>, argue that the agency should have invested in building reusable rockets and launch systems, or at least sourced them from private companies. SpaceX and Blue Origin have made their rocket launches partially reusable, and others are beginning to follow suit. SpaceX’s Starship, which it hopes to one day use to ferry people to the moon, Mars, and other parts of the solar system, will likely become the first of its class to launch successfully as a fully reusable system</p> <p><a href="https://www.thedailybeast.com/chinas-emulating-spacexs-designs-for-reusable-long-march-9-megarocket?source=articles&via=rss">Read more at The Daily Beast.</a></p><!-- /wp:html -->

Tu Haichao/Xinhua via Getty Images

Reusable rockets are all the rage now, apparently—and China seems to be hopping on the trend. According to SpaceNews, Liu Bing, the director of the general design department at the China Academy of Launch Vehicle Technology, confirmed that the country’s newest rocket, the Long March 9, will feature a reusable first stage booster.

The announcement was big enough to get a reaction from Chief Twit (and SpaceX founder and CEO) Elon Musk, who tweeted:

As SpaceX has proven, reusing rockets can slash launch costs by millions, allowing funds to be directed toward research, innovation, and (of course) more launches. Critics of NASA’s Space Launch System, which is set to debut whenever the hell Artemis I ends up launching, argue that the agency should have invested in building reusable rockets and launch systems, or at least sourced them from private companies. SpaceX and Blue Origin have made their rocket launches partially reusable, and others are beginning to follow suit. SpaceX’s Starship, which it hopes to one day use to ferry people to the moon, Mars, and other parts of the solar system, will likely become the first of its class to launch successfully as a fully reusable system

Read more at The Daily Beast.

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