Navigator® 6 Report post Posted February 19, 2006 (edited) Japan successfully launched a rocket carrying a satellite on Saturday, the second time it has done so in less than a month and a much-needed boost for its space program after a string of mishaps.The H-2A rocket lifted off from the Tanegashima Space Center in the southern Kagoshima region and is carrying a 4.7-tonne satellite, the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) said.A JAXA spokesman described the launch as success, adding the rocket had placed the satellite into the right orbit.The satellite will be used for controlling air traffic as well as gathering meteorological data."It shows that the reliability of the H-2A is surely rising and that our nation's space program is steadily progressing," Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi said of the launch, according to Kyodo news agency.After a lapse of nearly a year, the H-2A, the largest rocket in Japan's space program, successfully put a land-observation satellite into orbit in January.Both launches will likely bolster Japan's plans to enter the commercial satellite business and lift confidence among the country's space community, after two unsuccessful launches of the H-2, the H-2A's predecessor, in the 1990s.In other news: * Software pioneer Bricklin tackles wikis * Rock's living history, streamed online * RSA: Taking a bite out of cybercrime * 'Dodos' film pecks holes in evolution debate * Sign up for News.com's Morning Dispatch and other newsletters, click here.More recently, Japan's space program appeared to have made history when JAXA announced in November that an unmanned probe successfully collected rock samples from an asteroid nearly 300 million km (186 million miles) from Earth.But jubilation soon turned to disappointment as data sent from the probe showed that it had probably failed to collect samples.Adding insult to injury, the agency said in December that the probe would not return to earth until June 2010, three years later than initially planned. source : http://news.com.com/Japan+successfully+pla....html?tag=st_lh Edited February 19, 2006 by Navigator® Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites