Japan launching spy satellite on penultimate mission of H-2A rocket early Sept. 26


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 A white, black and orange rocket lifts off a seaside launch pad, creating a large plume of white exhaust.  A white, black and orange rocket lifts off a seaside launch pad, creating a large plume of white exhaust.

A Mitsubishi Heavy Industries H-2A rocket lifts off from Tanegashima Space Center carrying Japan’s IGS Optical 8 reconnaissance satellite on Jan. 11, 2024. | Credit: Mitsubishi Heavy Industries via X

Japan’s workhorse H-2A rocket is set to fly for the second-to-last time early Thursday morning (Sept. 26).

An H-2A topped with a secret spy satellite called IGS-Radar 8 is scheduled to lift off from Japan’s Tanegashima Space Center on Thursday at 1:24 a.m. EDT (0524 GMT and 2:24 p.m. local Japan time).

Space.com will provide a webcast of the launch, if one is made available.

According to NextSpaceflight.com, IGS-Radar 8 will head to sun-synchronous orbit (SSO), a polar path in which satellites cruise over patches of Earth at the same local solar time each day. SSOs are common destinations for spy and weather satellites, because they provide consistent lighting conditions over time.

IGS-Radar 8 will be operated by Japan’s Cabinet Satellite Information Center, like other members of the IGS (“Information Gathering System”) fleet. As its name suggests, the spacecraft will study Earth in radar light, collecting data for intelligence purposes and for natural-disaster monitoring.

The IGS fleet of satellites includes both a radar and an optical line. Indeed, the most recent H-2A launch, which occurred this past January, sent the IGS-Optical 8 spy satellite to SSO.

Related: The history of rockets

RELATED STORIES:

— Facts about Japan’s H-2A and H-2B rockets

— JAXA: Japan’s Aerospace Exploration Agency

— Gallery: Declassified US spy satellite photos & designs

Mitsubishi Heavy Industries built and operates the H-2A, which debuted in 2001. The 174-foot-tall (53 meters) rocket has 48 missions under its belt to date, all of them successful except one; it failed during the November 2003 launch of the IGS 2 satellite.

The end is near for the workhorse H-2A, however. It will be retired after its 50th launch, which could occur before the end of the year. The H-2A will be replaced by the new H3, which has launched three times to date, most recently on June 30.



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