TOKYO, Feb 14 (NNN-NHK) – Japan’s space agency, said today, the first launch of its new H3 rocket would be delayed again, this time due to bad weather conditions.
According to the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA), the scheduled maiden launch of the H3 rocket has been postponed from Wednesday to Friday morning, between 10:37 a.m. and 10:44 a.m. local time.
JAXA said, the delayed launch was due to strong winds, along with cloudy and rainy conditions, at the Tanegashima Space Centre launch site, in Kagoshima Prefecture, south-western Japan.
The launch of the H3 rocket, Japan’s successor to the H2A rocket, its previous mainstay launch vehicle, was initially planned for Feb 12, but pushed back to Feb 15, owing to a glitch in the rocket’s flight system.
The rocket, jointly developed by JAXA and Mitsubishi Heavy Industries in 2014, with costs topping 200 billion yen (1.51 billion U.S. dollars), was set to carry an earth observation satellite called DAICHI-3.
The new rocket can carry a payload roughly 30 percent heavier than its predecessor, with launches estimated to cost 50 percent less.
The DAICHI-3 earth observation satellite is purported to be used to assist in disaster management situations.– NNN-NHK