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View Full Version : China may have just flown a new space plane


NutLoose
11th Sep 2020, 20:02
Details here

https://www.npr.org/2020/09/09/911113352/new-chinese-space-plane-landed-at-mysterious-air-base-evidence-suggests

wiggy
11th Sep 2020, 20:12
More here:

https://spacenews.com/china-carries-out-secretive-launch-of-reusable-experimental-spacecraft/

Also for the anoraks there's some orbital and other analysis on the satrackcam Leiden blog that Google might help you find - this forum's website is blocking the URL for the blog.

Willard Whyte
14th Sep 2020, 16:33
Details here

https://www.npr.org/2020/09/09/911113352/new-chinese-space-plane-landed-at-mysterious-air-base-evidence-suggests

I suppose it was inevitable that China would get its own version of Homey Airport.

Asturias56
14th Sep 2020, 16:34
Learn from the best..........

Less Hair
14th Sep 2020, 20:10
What are these long flying unmanned space planes good for? To put mines on or bug other nation's satellites? Or to inspect or steal them?
Everybody seems to want one these days.

ORAC
14th Sep 2020, 21:13
Tests things out in space and see how they last - new materials, types of glass or composite lenses, antennae, electronic component EMC etc, and recover them to inspect them in the lab.
For example chip level atomic clocks etc.

wub
15th Sep 2020, 08:15
Tests things out in space and see how they last - new materials, types of glass or composite lenses, antennae, electronic component EMC etc, and recover them to inspect them in the lab.
For example chip level atomic clocks etc.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Long_Duration_Exposure_Facility

pasta
15th Sep 2020, 09:24
Speculating, but presumably it can be quite useful to have a ready-made and tested satellite to which you can bolt a new set of instruments at relatively short notice. Whenever something new crops up that you want to "measure" from orbit, all you have to do is build the "measuring instrument", plug it into the existing satellite bus and launch it. The only thing that needs to be designed/built is the new instrumentation; the power supply, cooling, manoeuvring, comms etc is already taken care of. If something changes, requiring you to modify your instrumentation, you just land it, make your changes and relaunch. That may well be quicker than building a new satellite from scratch, and could plausibly be cheaper too.