简体中文
繁體中文
English
Pусский
日本語
ภาษาไทย
Tiếng Việt
Bahasa Indonesia
Español
हिन्दी
Filippiiniläinen
Français
Deutsch
Português
Türkçe
한국어
العربية
Abstract:Videos and photos posted to Chinese social media show the mid-flight destruction of a Long March 4C rocket and a reported military payload on top.
China attempted to launch a top-secret military satellite into orbit on Thursday.
However, videos and pictures posted to Chinese social media showed the Long March 4C rocket launch failing in mid-flight.
Chinese state media later confirmed the loss of the space mission, apparently due a problem with the rocket's third and uppermost stage.
The rocket failure marks the nation's second of 2019. The first was by a Chinese startup called OneSpace.
Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.
China attempted to launch a top-secret military payload into space early Thursday morning, but the attempt ended in a rain of wreckage.
The loss of the Long March 4C rocket and its satellite marks the nation's second launch failure of 2019. The first was a commercial launch in March by the Chinese aerospace startup OneSpace.
China put out notifications of airspace closures and other safety measures ahead of the launch, though — as is common — it did not formally announce the mission.
The rocket lifted off of its launch pad at Taiyuan Satellite Launch Center in northern Shanxi Province around 6:49 a.m. local time (6:49 p.m. EDT on Wednesday). But within a couple of minutes, videos and photos posted to Chinese social media sites showed the rocket taking a hard and unexpected turn in the sky.
Zigzagged clouds of smoke then appeared in the sky, and one video posted to Weibo — a zoomed-in version of which is reproduced below — showed a tiny white dot rapidly falling back to Earth.
“Thanks to footage and images posted on Chinese social media & reposted elsewhere, it was possible to track this event and put the pieces together,” Andrew Jones, a contributor to Space News, tweeted on Thursday.
Xinhua confirmed the failure about 15 hours after the launch attempt. In a post on its website, the Chinese state news agency said the launcher's first and second rocket stages performed well, but noted a problem occurred with the third stage — the uppermost part that finishes pushing a payload into orbit.
Xinhua also said the rocket's wreckage was observed falling back to Earth.
Unverified photos posted to Twitter earlier on Thursday appear to show pieces of spacecraft, including frayed chunks of carbon-fiber composites and metallic panels, that reportedly landed in remote towns and villages shortly after the failure.
China's Long March 4C rockets have successfully flown Chinese satellites, probes, and other uncrewed payloads into space about two dozen times.
The launcher's last and only known failure was in August 2016, though Chinese officials waited weeks to confirm that mission's loss, according to Spaceflight Now.
Thursday's launch was designed to drop off a Yaogan-33 in orbit. Yaogan spacecraft are often described by Chinese state news agencies as land- and agriculture-surveying satellites, but western nations beg to differ.
“[O]utside analysts understand the satellites to be optical and synthetic aperture radar satellites for military reconnaissance purposes,” Jones reported at Space News.
Alex Ma contributed to this post.
Disclaimer:
The views in this article only represent the author's personal views, and do not constitute investment advice on this platform. This platform does not guarantee the accuracy, completeness and timeliness of the information in the article, and will not be liable for any loss caused by the use of or reliance on the information in the article.
Top 5 things to watch in markets in the week ahead
The week ahead – It’s going to be busy
Every investor wants to know what the recovery from the pandemic will look like, and Bank of America says China is providing important clues.
Oil futures slumped after the largest U.S. oil exchange-traded fund said it would sell all its front-month crude contracts to avoid further losses.