Chinese Space Programs - Government & Private

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Launch start up CAS Space Kinetic-2 rocket completed critical test

The loading was implemented in stages, starting from the maximum internal pressure condition to the maximum overload condition, achieving the experimental goals perfectly. The displacement and strain data obtained during this experiment also showed a high degree of consistency with the simulation forecast results.

Currently, all tasks for the maiden flight mission of Kinetic-2 are progressing rapidly. It is planned to launch the test spacecraft of the Qingzhou cargo spacecraft this September 2025.

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Qingzhou cargo spacraft
 
Launch start up iSpace Hyperbola 3 rocket marked new milestone
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The self-developed and manufactured Hyperbola-3 carrier rocket successfully completed the hydraulic strength test of its 4.2m diameter first-stage methane tank, with officials announcing that the “first flight has accelerated.”

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During the tests, the first-stage methane tank of the Hyperbola-3 carrier rocket was pressurized incrementally up to the predetermined pressure level, maintaining stable pressure for 15 minutes without any drop or leakage, demonstrating excellent product condition. This meets the design specifications. The trials confirmed that the storage tank's structural strength and seal integrity satisfy the design criteria, ensuring safe and reliable storage and transportation of methane fuel during the launch and flight phases of the rocket. This milestone indicates that all first-stage tanks of the Hyperbola-3 carrier rocket are now qualified to proceed to the next phase of work, laying a solid foundation for the rocket’s maiden flight in late 2025.
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China's crewed Moon rover Exploration enters manufacturing phase

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Long March 10 launch vehicle, the Mengzou crewed spacecraft, the Lanyue lunar lander, the Wangyu lunar suit, the Exploration manned lunar rover, etc., are currently in the initial sample development stage and have achieved phased progress. The relevant testing and launch facilities for the lunar mission at the Wenchang launch site are under development and construction in an orderly manner. The ground systems including telemetry, tracking and command (TT&C) and landing fields have completed their overall plans and will soon start various project constructions.

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Human spaceflight update:
A Long March 2F rocket will launch Shenzhou-20 crewed spacecraft with three Chinese astronauts to dock with China Space Station for 180-day mission on 24 Apr 2025.

Mission patch
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Six Zhuque-2 orbital launches expected in 2025

Since the beginning of the year, launch start up LandSpace has completed the assembly of two rockets and they are currently awaiting launch at the Dongfeng Commercial Aerospace Innovation Test Zone. Another Zhuque-2E carrier rocket has reached nearly 70% completion in its assembly process at the Jiaxing base. Currently, the assembly of major pipelines for the propulsion system and the cable avionics systems is underway. In 2025, LandSpace expects to launch six Zhuque-2E carrier rockets.


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Launch start up SpaceEpoch XZY-1 rocket preps for splash down test

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"The full-scale stainless steel rocket 'XZY-1 4200 is about to undergo sea soft landing recovery tests. The objectives of this test mission include: challenging engine shutdown at high altitude, secondary ignition, whole rocket hovering above sea surface, and verifying sea soft landing recovery."
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059201B5-50AB-43E4-AA3F-FB837ADAB684.webpLaunch start up AstroStone completesfirst stainless steel methane tank

Launch start up AstroStone AS-1 launch vehicle's second-stage stainless steel thin-wall common bulkhead tank has officially rolled off the production line, marking a significant step forward for the AS-1 rocket towards its maiden flight mission!

As the first 4.2-meter diameter stainless steel thin-wall common bulkhead tank, this product utilizes 30X material and vertical assembly welding technology. From the arrival of raw materials to the completion of acceptance testing, it took approximately 328 hours. This achievement not only optimizes the second-generation production process of AstroStone but also enhances the efficiency of the third-generation product iteration, achieving a breakthrough in the domestic full-size stainless steel thin-wall common bulkhead tank.

With a diameter of 4200mm and a height exceeding 10 meters, the equivalent thickness of the tank falls between 1-2mm. Compared to traditional dual-tank configuration tanks, the structural dry weight is reduced by more than 1000kg.

The AS-1 launch vehicle is a low-cost two-stage medium-sized liquid rocket that features a stainless steel structure with liquid oxygen methane propulsion, capture arm recovery, and reuse methods, targeting the market for launching payloads into medium and low Earth orbits. The AS-1 launch vehicle measures approximately 70 meters in total length, weighs about 570 tons at takeoff, has a rocket body diameter of 4.2 meters, can carry 15.7 tons to Low Earth Orbit (LEO) in a single-use configuration, and can carry 10 tons to LEO when reused.

Currently, AstroStone is taking comprehensive action, with every member working tirelessly on various fronts towards the static fire tests of the second stage of the AS-1 maiden flight rocket. Even under the night sky, the R&D center and production test center remain brightly lit—the AS-1 launch vehicle's second stage tank has been positioned in the final assembly workshop, awaiting final assembly.
 
China unveils a long-term planetary exploration roadmap

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China has unveiled a long-term planetary exploration roadmap for planetary habitability and the search for extraterrestrial life. Released by the Deep Space Exploration Laboratory (DSEL), the roadmap outlines a series of upcoming and proposed missions targeting key destinations across the solar system.

The plan kicks off with the Tianwen-3 Mars sample return mission, scheduled for launch in 2028, which will search for signs of past or present life. In 2029, Tianwen-4 aims to explore Jupiter and its moon Callisto. A mission to Venus in 2033 will collect atmospheric particles to probe its microenvironment, and a Mars research station focused on long-term environmental and biological studies is slated for around 2038.

The most ambitious proposal is a nuclear-powered mission to Neptune around 2039, intended to study its atmosphere, rings, and intriguing moon Triton. Triton, a possible ocean world with a retrograde orbit, shows signs of cryovolcanism, where fluids such as water, ammonia and methane erupt instead of molten rock. While not officially approved, the mission signals China’s growing interest in outer solar system astrobiology.

China’s planetary habitability roadmap looks like this:

  • Tianwen-3 Mars sample return (2028)
  • Tianwen-4 Jupiter and Callisto orbiter (2029)
  • Habitable Environments Simulator (2030)
  • Venus atmospheric sampler return (2033)
  • Mars Science Station (2038)
  • Neptune orbiter mission (2039)
 
China Completes 20th EVA

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**Beijing Time, March 21, 2025, 20:50:** After approximately 7 hours of extravehicular activity (EVA), astronauts Cai Xuzhe, Song Lingdong, and Wang Haoze from the Shenzhou-19 crew worked closely together. With the support of the space station's robotic arm and ground-based scientific personnel, they successfully completed tasks including the installation of space debris protection devices, inspection, and maintenance of external equipment on the space station. Extravehicular astronauts Cai Xuzhe and Song Lingdong have safely returned to the Wentian experimental module, marking a complete success for this EVA.

Astronaut Cai Xuzhe has now conducted five EVAs, making him the Chinese astronaut with the most extravehicular missions to date.

As of March 21, 2025, Chinese astronauts have cumulatively conducted 20 EVAs, with 19 of these during space station missions and one during the Shenzhou-7 mission.
 
China launches TJS-17, expanding classified geostationary satellite series

HELSINKI — China launched Thursday what appears to be the third satellite for a subset of classified, experimental satellites bound for geosynchronous orbit.

A Long March 3B rocket lifted off at 12:47 p.m. Eastern (1647 UTC) April 10 from the Xichang Satellite Launch Center, southwest China. The Shanghai Academy of Spaceflight Technology (SAST), a major arm of state-owned main space contractor CASC, announced launch success within an hour of liftoff.

The launch was anticipated due to airspace closure notices, but the payload was unknown until the SAST statement revealed the mission payload to be communication technology experiment Satellite-15, or Tongxin Jishu Shiyan-17 (TJS-17).

SAST, which developed the satellite, stated that TJS-17 will be “mainly used to carry out multi-band, high-speed satellite communication technology verification.” It published neither images nor technical details of the satellite, following the pattern for all previous TJS launches.

Broadly, the TJS series mainly operates in geostationary orbit (GEO). It is seen by Western analysts as potentially carrying out classified missions including signals intelligence, early warning missions and satellite inspection activities to support the People’s Liberation Army (PLA). China now has 16 main TJS satellites in orbit, with no apparent TJS-8 satellite.

The mission, however, does appear linked to two recent launches: the launch of TJS-15, March 9, also using a Long March 3B from Xichang, and TJS-16 launched via a Long March 7A rocket—seen as the kerosene-liquid oxygen successor to the aging, hypergolic Long March 3B—from Wenchang, March 29. All three of TJS-15, 16 and 17 were developed by SAST.

The TJS-17 mission patch from SAST depicts the King of the North, one of the Four Heavenly Kings; a set of Chinese deities each guarding one cardinal direction of the world. The TJS-15 and TJS-16 mission patches depicted the King of the West and King of the East, respectively. This hints at a possible forthcoming TJS mission to complete the celestial quartet.

TJS-15 is located around 90.3 degrees East, while TJS-16 is located at around 152.5 degrees East.

China launched its first TJS satellite in 2015, with eight launched over the past 18 months. Notable missions include TJS-13, launched in December 2024, joining two other Chinese satellites, Shiyan-10 (01) and Shiyan-10 (02), in a highly elliptical, Molniya-like orbit, and TJS-3, launched in 2018, which released an object which carried out subsequent maneuvers.

China launch plans

The TJS-17 mission was China’s 19th orbital launch of 2025. It follows the launch of four internet satellite test satellites April 1, and a Long March 6 launch from Taiyuan spaceport April 3, carrying Tianping-3A (02) into a near polar orbit.

China could be targeting 100 or more launches in 2025, driven by growing commercial activity, megaconstellation projects, and new launcher development. A number of new, medium-lift and potentially reusable rockets are targeting debut flights this year. Two of these could carry new, low-cost cargo spacecraft to Tiangong space station.

Major missions include the Tianwen-2 near-Earth asteroid sample return and main belt comet rendezvous mission, expected to launch around May, and the crewed Shenzhou-20 and -21 missions to the Tiangong.
 

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