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China successfully landed its first reusable rocket
Slovenia🏛️ PoliticsCenter7 hr. ago

China successfully landed its first reusable rocket

China has successfully landed a rocket designed for reuse, marking a significant breakthrough in its space program. The Long March 10B rocket launched from Hainan Island and returned to a floating platform six minutes after separating from its upper stage. This achievement could challenge U.S. dominance in reusable rocket technology, which companies like SpaceX and Blue Origin have already mastered. Traditional rockets are single-use, making launches expensive, but reusing the most costly parts—boosters—can drastically reduce costs for satellite deployment and space exploration. Unlike SpaceX’s Falcon 9, which lands autonomously, the Long March 10B uses a net on a floating platform for recovery. Following the announcement, shares of Chinese space-related companies rose sharply by 10%, the maximum allowed daily increase under Chinese financial market rules.

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2 reports

Delo logoDeloIndependent🔒Center7 hr. ago
China successfully landed its first reusable rocket

China has successfully landed a rocket designed for reuse, marking a significant breakthrough in its space program. The Long March 10B rocket launched from Hainan Island and returned to a floating platform six minutes after separating from its upper stage. This achievement could challenge U.S. dominance in reusable rocket technology, which companies like SpaceX and Blue Origin have already mastered. Traditional rockets are single-use, making launches expensive, but reusing the most costly parts—boosters—can drastically reduce costs for satellite deployment and space exploration. Unlike SpaceX’s Falcon 9, which lands autonomously, the Long March 10B uses a net on a floating platform for recovery. Following the announcement, shares of Chinese space-related companies rose sharply by 10%, the maximum allowed daily increase under Chinese financial market rules.

Bias read (Center): The article presents a factual account of China's technological advancement in reusable rocketry, comparing it to U.S. achievements without overtly favoring either side. It includes context about the implications for global space competition and economic impacts, maintaining neutrality in tone and避免

Dnevnik logoDnevnikIndependent🔒Center7 hr. ago
Elon Musk-inspired China: Successful return of a rocket that landed in a net instead of on a carrier

China has successfully completed the controlled return of the first stage of its Long March-10B rocket, marking its first such achievement and making it the second country in the world to accomplish this feat. Unlike SpaceX’s method of landing on land or floating platforms using legs, China’s rocket uses a novel system where the first stage catches a net stretched over a floating platform using special landing claws. The rocket was launched from the Hainan spaceport and separated six minutes after liftoff, with the first stage descending vertically and landing safely in the South China Sea. This technology significantly reduces launch costs by allowing the reuse of expensive rocket engines. While SpaceX pioneered this approach in 2015, China now joins them, while Europe lags behind with its Ariane 6 rocket lacking similar capabilities.

Bias read (Center): The article provides a factual account of China's technological advancement in reusable rocketry, comparing it to SpaceX's methods without overtly favoring either side. It includes technical details and mentions both Chinese and American achievements neutrally, avoiding loaded language or biased phr

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