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China becomes world leader in number of space launches

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China becomes world leader in number of space launches
Jul 6, 2012 17:19 Moscow Time

Vasili Kashin Jul 6, 2012 17:19 Moscow Time

In the first half of 2012, China has for the first time become the global leader in the number of space launches. China carried out ten space launches, Russia – nine, and the United States in third with eight.

Last year China was ahead of the United States for the first time. The Asian state had launched 19 carrier rockets, while the US only 18. At the same time, China was far behind Russia. Last year 32 carrier rockets were launched from Russian space launch sites. Two more rockets were launched from the French tropical Kuru spaceport and one from the sea launch platform belonging to the Russian-American joint venture “Sea Launch”.

“Despite the results of the first half of the year, China will still be lagging behind Russia this year,” says Vasily Kashin from the Centre for Analysis of Strategies and Technologies. “Russia is planning to launch 36 carrier rockets and that does not include the ‘Sea Launch’ program or launches from Kuru spaceport. And China is planning to launch 21 carrier rockets. So far, Russia has many more advantages over China in terms of its experience in managing orbital stations and its research of deep space. Russia has been manufacturing carrier rockets of the heavy class for a long time already, and China is only starting to develop them. And Russia’s manned space and carrier rocket program gives all reasons to hope that it will be able to keep the qualitative advantage. Certain Russian technologies, like compact nuclear reactors for spacecraft for example, are still unique and inaccessible to China.”

The difference between Russia’s and China’s space programs is that the Russian program is export-oriented. Half of Russia’s launches last year was fulfilling export orders or under joint space programs with other countries. In China, only three launches were carried out as part of the international cooperation program.

The advantage of China nowadays is the high reliability of its spacecraft and equipment.[/B] Thus, for instance, last year only one launch was a failure. The potential of the Chinese space industry might grow significantly, believes Vasily Kashin.

“China has started designing several new types of carrier rockets, including a giant CZ-9 which will have a 3000-ton take-off weight and Earth orbit carrying capacity of more than 100 tons. Not long ago, China became the second country after Russia to produce a 120-ton liquid rocket engine.”

The successful launch of the Shenzhou-9 spacecraft allowed the testing of many systems of the Tiangong-1 orbital module – a prototype of the future space station. Tiangong has only one dock, which means the crew can only work on the module for twenty days. However, this is quite sufficient to get the required experience in using the life support systems of the future orbital station.

Considering the successful efforts in developing the first Chinese orbital station, plans to conduct research of the Deep Space Chinese space program in the next decade might be comparable to the programs implemented in the Soviet Union in the 1980s. But this time the Chinese programs will be implemented on the modern technical level. The result could be a new competition in space between China and the United States with participation of Russia and the European Union. As the experience of the Cold War has shown, such competition might be an important factor in the progress of all humanity.


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A Russian poster mentioned, in a similar thread, that Russian has 10 more planned launches the remainder of this calender year.
 
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A Russian poster mentioned, in a similar thread, that Russian has 10 more planned launches the remainder of this calender year.

China has 11 more planned. We should end up with two more than they. However, we will have to wait and see.
 
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Speaking of Mars, has China sent anything to Mars yet? Anything concrete in the works, maybe?
 
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Speaking of Mars, has China sent anything to Mars yet? Anything concrete in the works, maybe?

chins tried it using a russian rocket, but i think it failed. most launches done by china are communication satllies, 2 navigation satellites and some rs sats.
 
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Speaking of Mars, has China sent anything to Mars yet? Anything concrete in the works, maybe?

China's space launch schedule from 2012 to 2028

I saw a Chinese Mars flight in a few years on NASA Spaceflight. I think China will use their own heavy-lift rocket.

Venus in 2015. Mars in 2016. See tentative launch schedule below.

Chinese launch schedule

China launches in 2012

01 - January 9 (0317:09.979UTC) - CZ-4B (Y26) - TSLC, LC9 - ZY-3 Ziyuan-3; VesselSat-2
02 - January 13 (0056:04.326UTC) - CZ-3A (Y22) - XSLC, LC3 - FY-2F Fengyun-2F
03 - February 24 (1612:04.289UTC) - CZ-3C (Y6) - XSLC, LC2 - Compass-G5
04 - March 31 (1027:04.438UTC) - CZ-3B/E (Y22) - XSLC, LC2 - Apstar-7
05 - April 29 (2050:03.968UTC) - CZ-3B/E (Y14) - XSLC, LC2 - Compass-M3; Compass-M4
06 - May 6 (0710:04.736UTC) - CZ-2D (Y17) - JSLC, 603 - TH-1B Tianhui-1B
07 - May 10 (0706:04.493UTC) - CZ-4B (Y12) - TSLC, LC9 - YG-14 Yaogan Weixing-14; TT-1 Tiantuo-1
08 - May 26 (1556:04.241UTC) - CZ-3B/E (Y17) - XSLC, LC2 - ZX-2A Zhongxing-2A
09 - May 29 (0731:05.187UTC) - CZ-4C (Y10) - TSLC, LC9 - YG-15 Yaogan Weixing-15
10 - June 16 (1037:24.558UTC) - CZ-2F/G (Y9) - JSLC, 921 - SZ-9 Shenzhou-9


China launch schedule

2012

July - CZ-4C (Y9) - JSLC, 603 - YG-16 Yaogan Weixing-16A/B/C
July - CZ-3C - XSLC, LC2 - TL-1C Tianlian-1C
August - CZ-3B/E (Y15?) - XSLC, LC2 - Compass-M2; Compass-M5
September 30 or first days of October - CZ-2D - JSLC, 603 - VRSS-1 (Venezuela Remote Sensing Satellite-1) 'Francisco Miranda'
October - CZ-3C - XSLC, LC2 - Compass-G6 (G2R)
November - CZ-4B - TSLC, LC9 - CBERS-3
December - CZ-2C - TSLC, LC9 - HJ-1C Huanjing-1C
December - CZ-3B/E - XSLC, LC2 - ZX-12 Zhongxing-12 (Chinasat-12)
Second half - CZ-2D - JSLC, 603 - Gokturk-2 (or 2013)
?? - CZ-2D - JSLC, 603 - SJ-9 Shijian 9A/B; FN-1 Fengniao-1A/B
?? - CZ-2C - JSLC, 603 - SJ-11 Shijian 11-05 (11-04R)
?? - CZ-4B - TSLC, LC9 - SJ-6 Shijian-6 Group 5

The following satellites will possibly be launched as piggyback payloads

?? - ?? - ?? - Beijing-2
?? - ?? - ?? - Jishu Shiyan-1 (NewTec-1)
?? - ?? - ?? - XY-1 Xinyan-1

2013

December 20 - CZ-3B/E - XSLC, LC2 - Túpac Katari 'TKSat-1' (Bolivia)
Early - CZ-4C - TSLC, LC9 - FY-3C Fengyun-3C (or December 2012)
Second quarter - CZ-3B/E - XSLC, LC2 - ZX-11 Zhongxing-11 (Chinasat-11)
Second quarter - CZ-3B/E - XSLC, LC2 - ZX-M Zhongxing-M (Chinasat-M)
Third quarter - CZ-3B/E - XSLC, LC2 - LaosSat-1
?? - CZ-7 - JSLC, 921 - TG-2 Tiangong-2
?? - CZ-2F/G - JSLC, 921 - SZ-10 Shenzhou-10 (or end 2012)
?? - CZ-2F - JSLC, 921 - SZ-11 Shenzhou-11
?? - CZ-2F - JSLC, 921 - SZ-12 Shenzhou-12
?? - CZ-2D - JSLC, 631 - Shiyan Weixing-5; Chuangxin-4
?? - CZ-2D - JSLC, 631 - civilian high-resolution remote sensing satellite
?? - CZ-3B/E - XSLC, LC2 - ZX-9A Zhongxing-9A (Chinasat-9A)
?? - CZ-3B - XSLC, LC2 - Chang'e-3 (Moon lander/rover)
?? - CZ-3B - XSLC, LC2 - Communications Satellite
?? - CZ-4B - TSLC, LC9 - HY-2B Haiyang-2B (or 2014)
?? - ?? - ?? - Pakistani remote sensing satellite (RSSS)
?? - ?? - ?? - YG-17 YaoGan Weixing-17
?? - ?? - ?? - YG-18 YaoGan Weixing-18
?? - ?? - ?? - YG-19 YaoGan Weixing-19
?? - ?? - ?? - YG-20 YaoGan Weixing-20
?? - ?? - ?? - HY-3A Haiyang-3A
?? - ?? - ?? - FAST (FAST-D and FAST-T: Formation for Atmospheric Science and Technology)
?? - CZ-6 - ?? - ??

2014

August - ?? - TSLC - CBERS-4
First quarter - CZ-3B/E - XSLC - Belarus Sat-1
Second half - CZ-3B - XSLC - Barcelona Moon Team
?? - CZ-3A - XSLC, LC3 - FY-2G Fengyun-2G
?? - CZ-3B/E - XSLC - ZX-5 Zhongxing-5 (Chinasat-5)
?? - CZ-3B/E - XSLC - TurkmenistanSat
?? - CZ-3B - XSLC - NigComSat-2
?? - CZ-3B - XSLC - Chang'e-4 (Moon lander/rover)
?? - CZ-5 - WSLC - ??
?? - CZ-7 - WSLC - ??
?? - CZ-?? - ?? - CFOSAT (China-France Oceanography SATellite)
?? - ?? - ?? - Scientific Experimental Satellite for Global Carbon Dioxide Monitoring
?? - CZ-2C(?) - ?? - CSES-1 Earthquake electromagnetism monitor satellite
?? - ?? - ?? - Hard X-ray Modulation Telescope 'HXMT'

2015

June - ?? - ?? - Venus probe
December - CZ-4B - TSLC - FY-3D Fengyun-3D (Batch 2)
?? - CZ-2C - JSLC - SJ-10 Shijian-10
?? - ?? - ?? - FY-3 Fengyun-3 RM-1
?? - ?? - ?? - Kuafu-A
?? - ?? - ?? - Kuafu-B (1)
?? - ?? - ?? - Kuafu-B (2)
?? - ?? - ?? - Dark Matter Satellite
NET - ?? - ?? - VeneSat-2
NET - CZ-3B/E - XSLC - NigComSat-3
NET - CZ-3B/E - XSLC - SupremeSAT
?? - CZ-3B/E - XSLC, LC2 - LaosSat-1

2016

January / April - ?? - ?? - Mars probe
?? - CZ-7 - JSLC - TG-3 Tiangong-3 (or 2015)
?? - CZ-3A - XSLC - FY-2H Fengyun-2H
?? - CZ-4B - TSLC, LC9 - FY-4A Fengyun-4A
?? - ?? - TSLC - CBERS-4B
?? - ?? - ?? - Quantum Science Satellite

2017

NET - ?? - TSLC - CBERS-SAR 1
?? - CZ-5 - WSLC - Chang'e-5 (Sample return)
?? - ?? - ?? - HY-3B Haiyang-3B
?? - ?? - TSLC - FY-3E Fengyun-3E (Batch 2)
?? - ?? - ?? - FY-4B Fengyun-4B
?? - ?? - ?? - Asteroid rendezvous and touchdown

2017 / 2020

?? - CZ-5 - WSLC - Chang'e-6 (Sample return)

2018

?? - ?? - TSLC - CBERS-SAR 1
?? - ?? - ?? - Deep Space Solar Observatory

2019

?? - ?? - TSLC - FY-3F Fengyun-3F (Batch 2)
?? - ?? - ?? - FY-3 Fengyun-3 RM-2

2020

September - ?? - TSLC - CBERS-6
?? - ?? - CZ-5 - Space Station Core Module
?? - ?? - CZ-5 - Space Station Laboratory
?? - ?? - ?? - FY-4C Fengyun-4C (or 2019)
NET - ?? - ?? - Recoverable Moon Probes

2021

?? - ?? - TSLC - FY-3G Fengyun-3G (Batch 2)
?? - ?? - ?? - Venus Global Sensing Probe

2022

?? - ?? - ?? - HY-3C Haiyang-3C
?? - ?? - ?? - Mars Rover

2023

?? - ?? - ?? - Polar Orbiter Solar Probe

2024

?? - ?? - ?? - Asteroid Sample Return Mission

2025

Proposed Moon Landing
?? - ?? - ?? - Jupiter Orbiter

2027

?? - ?? - ?? - FY-4E Fengyun-4E

2028

?? - ?? - ?? - Mars Sample Return

[Note: Thank you to Satori.]
 
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Speaking of Mars, has China sent anything to Mars yet? Anything concrete in the works, maybe?

Those incompetent Russians have just foiled our plan to send our probe in 2011, now we have to wait till 2014 with our new launch pad being ready for our 25 tons LEO CZ-5 rocket.
 
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Some one needs to send a probe that can return samples...don't care who...but to really plan a manned mission we need samples we can fully analyse here on earth.
 
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chins tried it using a russian rocket, but i think it failed. most launches done by china are communication satllies, 2 navigation satellites and some rs sats.

we planned to hitchhike a Russian spacecraft,but that Russian spacecraft failed.

Yinghuo-1 was a Chinese Mars-exploration space probe, intended to be the first Chinese spacecraft to explore Mars. It was launched from Baikonur Cosmodrome, Kazakhstan, on 8 November 2011, along with the Russian Fobos-Grunt sample return spacecraft, which was intended to visit Mars' moon Phobos.Shortly after launch, Fobos-Grunt was expected to perform two burns to depart Earth orbit and begin its journey to Mars. However, these burns did not take place, stranding the two spacecraft in their parking orbit.[8] Despite repeated efforts to contact Fobos-Grunt and rectify the problem, the spacecraft continued to lose altitude
 
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Do space launches even include Satellites ??

Some do. Some don't.

Tiangong space station is not a satellite. It's a space lab.

DFH-4 is a communications satellite.

Yaogang satellites are claimed to be military satellites by western analysts.

Some space launches carry secret military payloads. It's most likely a spy satellite, but no one knows for sure.

Next year, I think China has scheduled a space probe to the Moon. It's a rover, not a satellite.

In 2014, China is sending up the HXMT telescope. That's not a satellite in the layman view.

Having said all of this, most rockets carry satellites into orbit.
 
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