South Korea says it successfully test-fired first solid-fuel space rocket

South Korea says it successfully test-fired first solid-fuel space rocket
A South Korea-built, liquid-fuelled Nuri rocket launching from the Naro Space Centre south of Seoul on Oct 21, 2021.
PHOTO: Reuters

SEOUL - South Korea's military said it had successfully test-fired a solid-fuel space rocket for the first time on Wednesday (March 30), a step it said will help eventually launch a constellation of satellites to better monitor threats such as North Korea.

The launch is the first such test since South Korea and the United States agreed last year to end decades of restrictions on the South's ballistic missile and rocket development, and comes less than a week after North Korea conducted its highest missile test yet.

"The success of the test launch of this solid-propelled space launch vehicle is an important milestone in strengthening the defence power of our military's independent space-based surveillance and reconnaissance field at a very critical time," the Ministry of National Defence said in a statement, citing last week's test of an intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) by North Korea.

The defence minister observed the launch of the rocket, which was developed with "pure Korean technology", the statement said.

In October last year, South Korea conducted the first test launch of the Nuri liquid-fuelled rocket, its first domestically built space launch vehicle.

Nuri blasted off but failed to fully place a dummy satellite into orbit, delivering mixed results for a test launch that represented a major leap for the country's ambitious space plans.

[[nid:571007]]

In contrast to the Nuri's liquid-fuel design, a solid-fuel rocket such as the one tested on Wednesday would be simpler, less expensive to develop and manufacture, and faster to launch, the Defence Ministry said.

Wednesday's test verified the large solid-fuel engine, fairing separation, stage separation, and upper-stage attitude control technology, which are essential technologies for space launch vehicles, the statement added.

The ministry said it plans to eventually use the rocket to put a small satellite or a number of ultra-small satellites into low-Earth orbit in the future, and to later transfer some technology to the private sector to help revitalise the domestic space industry.

This website is best viewed using the latest versions of web browsers.