T-Minus: A new rocket explodes, China looks to Mars, and more

Counting down the three biggest space stories from March 4-10, 2024.
Stratolaunch / Freethink
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T:03 written in the style of a digital clock

Talon fires up its engines

Hypersonic vehicles — ones that move at least five times the speed of sound — could be the future of transportation and military weaponry, but designing them is a major challenge, partially because they’re extremely expensive and complicated to launch from the ground. 

Aerospace company Stratolaunch is building an “air launch” system that uses a massive plane, called “Roc,” to drop hypersonic prototypes from a high altitude. In addition to giving hypersonic vehicle developers a way to avoid the challenges of a traditional take-off, Stratolaunch envisions Roc one day being used to launch space planes, too.

While customers like the military or aerospace companies could use Roc for test flights of their own vehicles, Stratolaunch is also developing a hypersonic aircraft, called Talon-A, that they could use if they just wanted to test specific technologies for their own systems — and on March 9, the company completed its first powered test flight of the vehicle.

While Talon-A didn’t reach hypersonic speeds during this flight, it did accelerate to high supersonic speeds and complete a controlled landing on the water — encouraging signs on the path to ushering in an era of hypersonic flight.

a massive plane dropping a smaller plane while in flight
Stratolaunch
Talon-A being dropped from Roc during the test flight
T:02 written in the style of a digital clock

China updates rock collection plans

In September 2021, NASA’s Perseverance rover started collecting samples of Martian rock in the hope that a future mission will bring them back to Earth. It’s possible those could be the very first samples of Mars to reach our planet — but China wants to beat NASA to the punch.

While NASA’s proposed sample retrieval mission has been paused due to design, budget, and scheduling issues, China is making progress on its own plan to collect Mars rocks, telling reporters on March 6 that it has all the tech needed for the mission and expects to launch it around 2030.

Regardless of which nation brings back the first Mars rock samples, the achievement will be a boon for the global science community, as the rocks could answer important questions about the Red Planet, including whether it still contains water and whether it once hosted life.

An image of a rover and lander the surface of Mars
CNSA
China has already put a rover, seen here, on Mars. Its next goal is to bring some of Mars to Earth.
T:01 written in the style of a digital clock

Space One’s rocket explodes

On March 12, aerospace company Space One set out to become the first private company in Japan to successfully put a satellite into orbit, and unfortunately, it fell well short of its goal — five seconds after lift off, its Kairos rocket exploded.

According to Space One, the rocket’s automated system detected some anomaly that triggered self-destruction, but it is still investigating exactly what went wrong. Once it figures out the problem, it can start planning for the next launch attempt.

Though this was obviously not the outcome Space One was hoping for, most private rockets fail to reach space on their first try — in fact, Chinese startup Space Pioneer is to date the only private company to succeed in reaching orbit with a new rocket on its inaugural flight.

“We don’t use the world ‘failure,’ because each trial brings us … new data and experience for another challenge,” Masakazu Toyoda, Space One’s president, told reporters during a news conference.

An artist's rendering of a Space One rocket flying over the Earth.
Space One
An illustration of what Kairos might have looked like had it reached orbit

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