From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Long March 4B
Rendering of Long March 4B
Function Launch vehicle
Manufacturer SAST
Country of origin China
Cost per launchUS$50 million (2006) [1]
Size
Height44.1 m (145 ft) [1]
Diameter3.35 m (11.0 ft) [2]
Mass249,200 kg (549,400 lb) [2]
Stages3
Capacity
Payload to LEO
Mass4,200 kg (9,300 lb) [3]
Payload to SSO
Mass2,800 kg (6,200 lb) [3]
Payload to GTO
Mass1,500 kg (3,300 lb) [3]
Associated rockets
Family Long March
Derivative work Long March 4C
Launch history
StatusActive
Launch sites
Total launches48
Success(es)47
Failure(s)1
First flight10 May 1999
Last flight16 April 2023
First stage
Height27.91 m (91.6 ft)
Diameter3.35 m (11.0 ft)
Propellant mass182,000 kg (401,000 lb)
Powered by4 YF-21C
Maximum thrust2,961.6 kN (665,800 lbf)
Specific impulse2,550 m/s (8,400 ft/s)
Propellant N2O4 / UDMH
Second stage
Height10.9 m (36 ft)
Diameter3.35 m (11.0 ft)
Propellant mass52,700 kg (116,200 lb)
Powered by1 YF-24C
(1 x YF-22C (Main))
(4 x YF-23C (Vernier))
Maximum thrust742.04 kN (166,820 lbf) (Main)
47.1 kN (10,600 lbf) (Vernier)
Specific impulse2,942 m/s (9,650 ft/s) (Main)
2,834 m/s (9,300 ft/s) (Vernier)
Propellant N2O4 / UDMH
Third stage
Height14.79 m (48.5 ft)
Diameter2.9 m (9 ft 6 in)
Propellant mass14,000 kg (31,000 lb)
Powered by2 YF-40
Maximum thrust100.85 kN (22,670 lbf)
Specific impulse2,971 m/s (9,750 ft/s)
Propellant N2O4 / UDMH

The Long March 4B ( Chinese: 长征四号乙火箭), also known as the Chang Zheng 4B, CZ-4B, and LM-4B, is a Chinese expendable orbital launch vehicle. Launched from Launch Complex 1 at the Taiyuan Satellite Launch Center, it is a 3-stage launch vehicle, used mostly to place satellites into low Earth orbit and Sun-synchronous orbits. It was first launched on 10 May 1999, with the FY-1C weather satellite, which would later be the target in the 2007 Chinese anti-satellite missile test.

The Chang Zheng 4B experienced its only launch failure on 9 December 2013, with the loss of the CBERS-3 satellite. [4]

Launch statistics

1
2
3
4
5
1999
2005
2010
2015
2020
  •   Failure
  •   Partial failure
  •   Success
  •   Planned

List of launches

Flight
number
Serial
number
Date and time
(UTC)
Launch site Payload Orbit Result
1 Y2 10 May 1999
01:33
Taiyuan
LA-7
Fengyun 1C
Shijian 5
SSO Success
2 Y1 14 October 1999
03:15
Taiyuan
LA-7
CBERS-1
SACI-1
SSO Success
3 Y3 1 September 2000
03:25
Taiyuan
LA-7
Ziyuan II-01 SSO Success
4 Y5 15 May 2002
01:50
Taiyuan
LA-7
Fengyun 1D
HaiYang-1A
SSO Success
5 Y6 27 October 2002
03:17
Taiyuan
LA-7
Ziyuan II-02 SSO Success
6 Y4 21 October 2003
03:16
Taiyuan
LA-7
CBERS-2
Chuangxin 1-01
SSO Success
7 Y7 8 September 2004
23:14
Taiyuan
LA-7
Shijian 6-01A
Shijian 6-01B
SSO Success
8 Y8 6 November 2004
03:10
Taiyuan
LA-7
Ziyuan II-03 SSO Success
9 Y16 23 October 2006
23:34
Taiyuan
LA-7
Shijian 6-02A
Shijian 6-02B
SSO Success
10 Y17 19 September 2007
03:26
Taiyuan
LA-7
CBERS-2B SSO Success
11 Y22 25 October 2008
01:15
Taiyuan
LA-9
Shijian 6-03A
Shijian 6-03B
SSO Success
12 Y20 15 December 2008
03:22
Taiyuan
LA-9
Yaogan 5 SSO Success
13 Y23 6 October 2010
00:49
Taiyuan
LA-9
Shijian 6-04A
Shijian 6-04B
SSO Success
14 Y14 15 August 2011
22:57
Taiyuan
LA-9
HaiYang-2A SSO Success
15 Y21 9 November 2011
03:21
Taiyuan
LA-9
Yaogan 12
Tianxun 1
SSO Success
16 Y15 22 December 2011
03:26
Taiyuan
LA-9
Ziyuan I-02C SSO Success
17 Y26 9 January 2012
03:17
Taiyuan
LA-9
Ziyuan 3-01
VesselSat-2
SSO Success
18 Y12 10 May 2012
07:06
Taiyuan
LA-9
Yaogan 14
Tiantuo 1
SSO Success
19 Y25 25 October 2013
03:50
Jiuquan
LA-4/SLS-2
Shijian 16-01 LEO Success
20 Y10 9 December 2013
03:26
Taiyuan
LA-9
CBERS-3 SSO Failure
One of the two third-stage engines shut down prematurely, so that the satellite failed to reach orbit. The cause was traced to foreign debris that blocked the engine's fuel intake. [5]
21 Y27 19 August 2014
03:15
Taiyuan
LA-9
Gaofen 2
BRITE-PL2 (Heweliusz)
SSO Success
22 Y28 8 September 2014
03:22
Taiyuan
LA-9
Yaogan 21
Tiantuo 2
SSO Success
23 Y32 7 December 2014
03:26
Taiyuan
LA-9
CBERS-4 SSO Success
24 Y29 27 December 2014
03:22
Taiyuan
LA-9
Yaogan 26 SSO Success
25 Y30 26 June 2015
06:22
Taiyuan
LA-9
Gaofen 8 SSO Success
26 Y24 8 November 2015
07:06
Taiyuan
LA-9
Yaogan 28 SSO Success
27 Y33 30 May 2016
03:17
Taiyuan
LA-9
Ziyuan 3-02
ÑuSat-1/-2
SSO Success
28 Y35 29 June 2016
03:21
Jiuquan
LA-4/SLS-2
Shijian 16-02 LEO Success
29 Y31 15 June 2017
03:00
Jiuquan
LA-4/SLS-2
HXMT
ÑuSat-3
Zhuhai-1
LEO Success
30 Y37 31 July 2018
03:00
Taiyuan
LA-9
Gaofen 11-01 SSO Success
31 Y34 24 October 2018
22:57
Taiyuan
LA-9
Haiyang-2B SSO Success [6]
32 Y36 29 April 2019
22:52
Taiyuan
LA-9
Tianhui-2-01 A/B SSO Success
33 Y39 12 September 2019
03:26
Taiyuan
LA-9
Ziyuan I-02D SSO Success
34 Y38 3 November 2019
03:22
Taiyuan
LA-9
Gaofen 7
Xiaoxiang 1-08
SSO Success
35 Y44 20 December 2019
03:22
Taiyuan
LA-9
CBERS-4A
ETRSS-1
SSO Success
36 Y43 3 July 2020
03:10
Taiyuan
LA-9
Gaofen Multi-Mode
BY-70-2
SSO Success
37 Y45 25 July 2020
03:13
Taiyuan
LA-9
Ziyuan 3-03
Tianqi 10
NJU-HKU 1
SSO Success
38 Y46 7 September 2020
05:57
Taiyuan
LA-9
Gaofen 11-02 SSO Success
A booster presumably coming from this launch fell near populated areas. [7] [8]
39 Y41 21 September 2020
05:40
Jiuquan
LA-4/SLS-2
Haiyang-2C LEO Success
40 Y42 27 September 2020
03:23
Taiyuan
LA-9
Huanjing-2A
Huanjing-2B
SSO Success
41 Y49 8 April 2021
23:01
Taiyuan
LA-9
Shiyan 6-03 SSO Success
42 Y48 19 May 2021
04:03
Jiuquan
LA-4/SLS-2
Haiyang-2D LEO Success
43 Y50 18 August 2021
22:32
Taiyuan
LA-9
Tianhui-2 02A
Tianhui-2 02B
SSO Success
44 Y52 20 November 2021
01:51
Taiyuan
LA-9
Gaofen 11-03 SSO Success
45 Y47 10 December 2021
00:11
Jiuquan
LA-4/SLS-2
Shijian-6 05A
Shijian-6 05B
SSO Success
46 Y40 4 August 2022
03:08
Taiyuan
LA-9
TECIS
Minxing Shaonian
Jiaotong-4
SSO Success
47 Y55 27 December 2022
07:37
Taiyuan
LA-9
Gaofen 11-04 SSO Success
48 Y51 16 April 2023
01:36
Jiuquan
LA-4/SLS-2
Fengyun 3G LEO Success
Source: Gunter's Space Page [9]

See also

References

  1. ^ Brian Harvey (2013). China in Space: The Great Leap Forward. Springer Science & Business Media. p. 96. ISBN  978-1-4614-5043-6.
  2. ^ a b "CZ-4B". Encyclopedia Astronautica. Archived from the original on 21 March 2008. Retrieved 27 April 2008.
  3. ^ a b c "Long March-4B". Gunter's Space Page. Retrieved 27 April 2008.
  4. ^ Boadle, Anthony. "China-Brazil satellite launch fails, likely fell back to Earth". Reuters. Retrieved 10 December 2013.
  5. ^ "China Great Wall Pins December Long March Launch Failure on Fuel-line". SpaceNews. 3 March 2014. Retrieved 10 August 2015.
  6. ^ Barbosa, Rui C. (24 October 2018). "Chinese Long March 4B lofts Haiyang-2B". NASASpaceFlight.com. Retrieved 24 October 2018.
  7. ^ Jones, Andrew (7 September 2020). "Chinese rocket booster appears to crash near school during Gaofen 11 satellite launch". Space.com. Retrieved 7 September 2020.
  8. ^ Sebastian Kettley (8 September 2020). "China rocket crash: Watch the moment Long March booster rocket crashes near school - video". express.co.uk. Retrieved 14 March 2023.
  9. ^ "CZ-4B (Chang Zheng-4B)". Gunter's Space Page. Retrieved 25 October 2018.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Long March 4B
Rendering of Long March 4B
Function Launch vehicle
Manufacturer SAST
Country of origin China
Cost per launchUS$50 million (2006) [1]
Size
Height44.1 m (145 ft) [1]
Diameter3.35 m (11.0 ft) [2]
Mass249,200 kg (549,400 lb) [2]
Stages3
Capacity
Payload to LEO
Mass4,200 kg (9,300 lb) [3]
Payload to SSO
Mass2,800 kg (6,200 lb) [3]
Payload to GTO
Mass1,500 kg (3,300 lb) [3]
Associated rockets
Family Long March
Derivative work Long March 4C
Launch history
StatusActive
Launch sites
Total launches48
Success(es)47
Failure(s)1
First flight10 May 1999
Last flight16 April 2023
First stage
Height27.91 m (91.6 ft)
Diameter3.35 m (11.0 ft)
Propellant mass182,000 kg (401,000 lb)
Powered by4 YF-21C
Maximum thrust2,961.6 kN (665,800 lbf)
Specific impulse2,550 m/s (8,400 ft/s)
Propellant N2O4 / UDMH
Second stage
Height10.9 m (36 ft)
Diameter3.35 m (11.0 ft)
Propellant mass52,700 kg (116,200 lb)
Powered by1 YF-24C
(1 x YF-22C (Main))
(4 x YF-23C (Vernier))
Maximum thrust742.04 kN (166,820 lbf) (Main)
47.1 kN (10,600 lbf) (Vernier)
Specific impulse2,942 m/s (9,650 ft/s) (Main)
2,834 m/s (9,300 ft/s) (Vernier)
Propellant N2O4 / UDMH
Third stage
Height14.79 m (48.5 ft)
Diameter2.9 m (9 ft 6 in)
Propellant mass14,000 kg (31,000 lb)
Powered by2 YF-40
Maximum thrust100.85 kN (22,670 lbf)
Specific impulse2,971 m/s (9,750 ft/s)
Propellant N2O4 / UDMH

The Long March 4B ( Chinese: 长征四号乙火箭), also known as the Chang Zheng 4B, CZ-4B, and LM-4B, is a Chinese expendable orbital launch vehicle. Launched from Launch Complex 1 at the Taiyuan Satellite Launch Center, it is a 3-stage launch vehicle, used mostly to place satellites into low Earth orbit and Sun-synchronous orbits. It was first launched on 10 May 1999, with the FY-1C weather satellite, which would later be the target in the 2007 Chinese anti-satellite missile test.

The Chang Zheng 4B experienced its only launch failure on 9 December 2013, with the loss of the CBERS-3 satellite. [4]

Launch statistics

1
2
3
4
5
1999
2005
2010
2015
2020
  •   Failure
  •   Partial failure
  •   Success
  •   Planned

List of launches

Flight
number
Serial
number
Date and time
(UTC)
Launch site Payload Orbit Result
1 Y2 10 May 1999
01:33
Taiyuan
LA-7
Fengyun 1C
Shijian 5
SSO Success
2 Y1 14 October 1999
03:15
Taiyuan
LA-7
CBERS-1
SACI-1
SSO Success
3 Y3 1 September 2000
03:25
Taiyuan
LA-7
Ziyuan II-01 SSO Success
4 Y5 15 May 2002
01:50
Taiyuan
LA-7
Fengyun 1D
HaiYang-1A
SSO Success
5 Y6 27 October 2002
03:17
Taiyuan
LA-7
Ziyuan II-02 SSO Success
6 Y4 21 October 2003
03:16
Taiyuan
LA-7
CBERS-2
Chuangxin 1-01
SSO Success
7 Y7 8 September 2004
23:14
Taiyuan
LA-7
Shijian 6-01A
Shijian 6-01B
SSO Success
8 Y8 6 November 2004
03:10
Taiyuan
LA-7
Ziyuan II-03 SSO Success
9 Y16 23 October 2006
23:34
Taiyuan
LA-7
Shijian 6-02A
Shijian 6-02B
SSO Success
10 Y17 19 September 2007
03:26
Taiyuan
LA-7
CBERS-2B SSO Success
11 Y22 25 October 2008
01:15
Taiyuan
LA-9
Shijian 6-03A
Shijian 6-03B
SSO Success
12 Y20 15 December 2008
03:22
Taiyuan
LA-9
Yaogan 5 SSO Success
13 Y23 6 October 2010
00:49
Taiyuan
LA-9
Shijian 6-04A
Shijian 6-04B
SSO Success
14 Y14 15 August 2011
22:57
Taiyuan
LA-9
HaiYang-2A SSO Success
15 Y21 9 November 2011
03:21
Taiyuan
LA-9
Yaogan 12
Tianxun 1
SSO Success
16 Y15 22 December 2011
03:26
Taiyuan
LA-9
Ziyuan I-02C SSO Success
17 Y26 9 January 2012
03:17
Taiyuan
LA-9
Ziyuan 3-01
VesselSat-2
SSO Success
18 Y12 10 May 2012
07:06
Taiyuan
LA-9
Yaogan 14
Tiantuo 1
SSO Success
19 Y25 25 October 2013
03:50
Jiuquan
LA-4/SLS-2
Shijian 16-01 LEO Success
20 Y10 9 December 2013
03:26
Taiyuan
LA-9
CBERS-3 SSO Failure
One of the two third-stage engines shut down prematurely, so that the satellite failed to reach orbit. The cause was traced to foreign debris that blocked the engine's fuel intake. [5]
21 Y27 19 August 2014
03:15
Taiyuan
LA-9
Gaofen 2
BRITE-PL2 (Heweliusz)
SSO Success
22 Y28 8 September 2014
03:22
Taiyuan
LA-9
Yaogan 21
Tiantuo 2
SSO Success
23 Y32 7 December 2014
03:26
Taiyuan
LA-9
CBERS-4 SSO Success
24 Y29 27 December 2014
03:22
Taiyuan
LA-9
Yaogan 26 SSO Success
25 Y30 26 June 2015
06:22
Taiyuan
LA-9
Gaofen 8 SSO Success
26 Y24 8 November 2015
07:06
Taiyuan
LA-9
Yaogan 28 SSO Success
27 Y33 30 May 2016
03:17
Taiyuan
LA-9
Ziyuan 3-02
ÑuSat-1/-2
SSO Success
28 Y35 29 June 2016
03:21
Jiuquan
LA-4/SLS-2
Shijian 16-02 LEO Success
29 Y31 15 June 2017
03:00
Jiuquan
LA-4/SLS-2
HXMT
ÑuSat-3
Zhuhai-1
LEO Success
30 Y37 31 July 2018
03:00
Taiyuan
LA-9
Gaofen 11-01 SSO Success
31 Y34 24 October 2018
22:57
Taiyuan
LA-9
Haiyang-2B SSO Success [6]
32 Y36 29 April 2019
22:52
Taiyuan
LA-9
Tianhui-2-01 A/B SSO Success
33 Y39 12 September 2019
03:26
Taiyuan
LA-9
Ziyuan I-02D SSO Success
34 Y38 3 November 2019
03:22
Taiyuan
LA-9
Gaofen 7
Xiaoxiang 1-08
SSO Success
35 Y44 20 December 2019
03:22
Taiyuan
LA-9
CBERS-4A
ETRSS-1
SSO Success
36 Y43 3 July 2020
03:10
Taiyuan
LA-9
Gaofen Multi-Mode
BY-70-2
SSO Success
37 Y45 25 July 2020
03:13
Taiyuan
LA-9
Ziyuan 3-03
Tianqi 10
NJU-HKU 1
SSO Success
38 Y46 7 September 2020
05:57
Taiyuan
LA-9
Gaofen 11-02 SSO Success
A booster presumably coming from this launch fell near populated areas. [7] [8]
39 Y41 21 September 2020
05:40
Jiuquan
LA-4/SLS-2
Haiyang-2C LEO Success
40 Y42 27 September 2020
03:23
Taiyuan
LA-9
Huanjing-2A
Huanjing-2B
SSO Success
41 Y49 8 April 2021
23:01
Taiyuan
LA-9
Shiyan 6-03 SSO Success
42 Y48 19 May 2021
04:03
Jiuquan
LA-4/SLS-2
Haiyang-2D LEO Success
43 Y50 18 August 2021
22:32
Taiyuan
LA-9
Tianhui-2 02A
Tianhui-2 02B
SSO Success
44 Y52 20 November 2021
01:51
Taiyuan
LA-9
Gaofen 11-03 SSO Success
45 Y47 10 December 2021
00:11
Jiuquan
LA-4/SLS-2
Shijian-6 05A
Shijian-6 05B
SSO Success
46 Y40 4 August 2022
03:08
Taiyuan
LA-9
TECIS
Minxing Shaonian
Jiaotong-4
SSO Success
47 Y55 27 December 2022
07:37
Taiyuan
LA-9
Gaofen 11-04 SSO Success
48 Y51 16 April 2023
01:36
Jiuquan
LA-4/SLS-2
Fengyun 3G LEO Success
Source: Gunter's Space Page [9]

See also

References

  1. ^ Brian Harvey (2013). China in Space: The Great Leap Forward. Springer Science & Business Media. p. 96. ISBN  978-1-4614-5043-6.
  2. ^ a b "CZ-4B". Encyclopedia Astronautica. Archived from the original on 21 March 2008. Retrieved 27 April 2008.
  3. ^ a b c "Long March-4B". Gunter's Space Page. Retrieved 27 April 2008.
  4. ^ Boadle, Anthony. "China-Brazil satellite launch fails, likely fell back to Earth". Reuters. Retrieved 10 December 2013.
  5. ^ "China Great Wall Pins December Long March Launch Failure on Fuel-line". SpaceNews. 3 March 2014. Retrieved 10 August 2015.
  6. ^ Barbosa, Rui C. (24 October 2018). "Chinese Long March 4B lofts Haiyang-2B". NASASpaceFlight.com. Retrieved 24 October 2018.
  7. ^ Jones, Andrew (7 September 2020). "Chinese rocket booster appears to crash near school during Gaofen 11 satellite launch". Space.com. Retrieved 7 September 2020.
  8. ^ Sebastian Kettley (8 September 2020). "China rocket crash: Watch the moment Long March booster rocket crashes near school - video". express.co.uk. Retrieved 14 March 2023.
  9. ^ "CZ-4B (Chang Zheng-4B)". Gunter's Space Page. Retrieved 25 October 2018.

Videos

Youtube | Vimeo | Bing

Websites

Google | Yahoo | Bing

Encyclopedia

Google | Yahoo | Bing

Facebook