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Chinese private space company launches suborbital rocket

Updated: Sep 5,2018 4:04 PM     Xinhua

A Chinese private company sends a suborbital rocket into space at 1 pm from the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center in Northwest China, Sept 5, 2018. The SQX-1Z was developed by iSpace, a Beijing-based private rocket developer, founded in 2016 with a research center in Xi’an, Shaanxi province.[Photo/Xinhua]

JIUQUAN — A Chinese company sent a suborbital rocket into space at 1 pm from the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center in Northwest China on Sept 5.

The SQX-1Z was developed by iSpace, a Beijing-based private rocket developer, founded in 2016 with a research center in Xi’an, Shaanxi province.

The rocket carried three CubeSats, miniature satellites, for two Chinese commercial companies. After entering its preset orbit, the rocket will release two satellites for testing, and the other satellite will be parachuted to Earth, according to a statement by the company.

The SQX-1Z rocket will provide minisatellite and constellation launch services for clients, said Yao Bowen, spokesperson for the company.

A suborbital rocket usually has a flight path of less than one complete orbit of the Earth. It can reach an altitude of more than 100 km above sea level and then falls back to Earth. Suborbital rockets or satellites are primarily used for scientific experiments.

The 9.5-meter-long rocket can reach a maximum altitude of 175 kilometers and has a top speed of 1,600 meters per second. It can travel for 450 seconds.

This was the company’s second launch this year. In April, it launched a suborbital rocket, the Hyperbola-1S, from a launch center in the Southern province of Hainan.

The company also plans to launch a carrier rocket in 2019.

China’s aerospace exploration was dominated by State-owned companies and institutes until 2014 when private companies were allowed to develop and launch rockets.

China has more than 60 private companies in the commercial space industry. They are growing fast and competing for launches of small satellites and rockets.