Sunday, June 29, 2025

Japan H-2A Rocket Launches Earth Climate Satellite | Tanegashima Space Center

Japan H-2A Rocket Launches Earth Climate Satellite Tanegashima Space Center









A Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Group H-2A rocket successfully launched the GOSAT-GW, or Global Observing Satellite for Greenhouse Gases and Water Cycle Earth science satellite for the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) on June 28, 2025. It represented the 50th and final flight of this launch vehicle that had long been the workhorse for Japan's access to space.

The H-2A lifted off from the Tanegashima Space Center in Japan at 12:33 p.m. Eastern time. It deployed its payload, the GOSAT-GW or Ibuki GW, satellite into a sun-synchronous orbit 16 and a half minutes later. JAXA later reported that GOSAT-GW had extended its solar arrays as planned after deployment. This is the third mission in the GOSAT series.

GOSAT-GW, or Global Observing Satellite for Greenhouse Gases and Water Cycle, is a 2,600-kilogram spacecraft built by Mitsubishi Electric Corporation for JAXA. The spacecraft carries two major instruments, a microwave scanning radiometer to measure water on land, oceans and the atmosphere, and a spectrometer to observe three greenhouse gases in the atmosphere: carbon dioxide, methane, and nitrogen dioxide. GOSAT-GW has a planned seven-year lifetime.

The launch was the 50th and final flight of the H-2A, a rocket that Japan had long relied on for civil, commercial, and military satellites. The H-2A made its debut in 2001 and was successful in every launch but one, a November 2003 launch of two reconnaissance satellites that failed when one of its solid rocket boosters failed to separate.

The H-2A was primarily used for Earth and space science missions for JAXA, and for Japanese military reconnissance satellites. The vehicle did perform a handful of commercial launches, such as for satellite operators Inmarsat and Telesat, but the vehicle’s relatively high cost and low flight rate made it difficult to win orders.

The H-2A was a redesigned, upgraded version of the short-lived H-2 rocket that flew seven times from 1994 to 1999. Another variant, the H-2B, launched nine times from 2009 to 2020, each carrying an HTV cargo vehicle for the International Space Station.

The Japanese government announced plans more than a decade ago to phase out the H-2A for the H3 rocket. This would offer a higher flight rate and lower costs. The H3 made its debut in March 2023, but failed to reach orbit when its second stage failed to ignite.

The H3 made its first successful launch nearly a year later, reaching orbit with a test payload. The rocket has flown three more times since then, most recently in February 2025, all successfully.


Image Credit: JAXA/Mitsubishi Heavy Industries
Text Credit: William Graham/NSF
Release Date: June 28, 2025


#NASA #Space #Satellites #GOSATGW #Science #Planets #Earth #EarthScience #MitsubishiHeavyIndustries #三菱重工業株式会社 #H2Arocket #Atmosphere #WaterCycle #Climate #GreenhouseGases #GlobalHeating #ClimateChange #Environment #Japan #日本 #TanegashimaSpaceCenter #種子島宇宙センター #JAXA #宇宙航空研究開発機構 #STEM #Education

No comments:

Post a Comment