teensexonline.com
24.8 C
Jammu
Tuesday, September 17, 2024
HomeFeatured StoriesSouth Korea becomes seventh nation to successfully put satellites into orbit

South Korea becomes seventh nation to successfully put satellites into orbit

Date:

Related stories

Imran Khan’s military trial not on the cards

 The Pakistan Government has informed the High Court here...

Lahore power show: PTI local formations tasked with mass mobilisation

The Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf’s Lahore chapter has directed all its...

Japan’s first Uyghur lawmaker calls for stronger action against China’s human rights abuses

Arfiya Eri, Japan’s first Uyghur heritage lawmaker, is advocating...

Post-Hasina Bangladesh gravitates towards Urdu and Jinnah

In a nation where Bangla was a central pillar...

South Korea on Tuesday successfully launched a domestically developed rocket and put satellites into orbit, becoming the seventh country in the world to do so and opening the door for future development of its space program under the new president.

The launch came after the country’s previous attempt failed in October when it launched its first homegrown rocket, but a dummy satellite did not go into orbit as planned after separating from the rocket.

On Tuesday, the 200-ton liquid fuel rocket Nuri lifted off from the Naro Space Center in Goheung, a county on the southern tip of the Korean Peninsula, at 4 p.m. After reaching the target altitude of 700 kilometers, it released a 162.5-kilogram performance verification satellite and a 1.3-ton dummy satellite, the science ministry said.

“A path to the universe from our homeland has now opened,” South Korean President Yoon Suk-yeol said, vowing his administration’s full support for future space development programs by establishing a new government institution as pledged during his election campaign. He took office in May.

South Korea is now the seventh country in the world with the ability to put a satellite weighing 1 ton or heavier into orbit, joining the United States, Russia, France, China, Japan and India.

South Korean Science Minister Lee Jong-ho said the government plans to improve technical reliability and stability through four additional launches by 2027.

Tuesday’s launch had been postponed from last week due to a technical problem.

Latest stories