H3 Launch Vehicle
From Spacefaring
Q11222053
Q11222053
The H3 rocket is a Japanese medium-lift launch vehicle developed by JAXA and Mitsubishi Heavy Industries (MHI). It is the successor to the H-IIA and H-IIB rockets, designed to reduce launch costs through the use of the lower-cost LE-9 main engine. The H3 features a modular design with two or three first-stage engines and zero, two, or four solid rocket boosters, allowing it to accommodate a variety of payload sizes. Development began in 2013, and the first flight took place in March 2023; the launch ended in failure when the second-stage engine did not ignite. The first successful test flight occurred in February 2024.
Wikimedia, Wikidata
H3
diameter 5.2 metre,
Mitsubishi Heavy Industries,
Sikh Confederacy, Republic of Haiti, medium-lift launch vehicle, launch vehicle, expendable launch vehicle, Ekran, Dong Fang Hong 2, Tarshish, Sweden, Ashkenaz, Persia, Kingdom of Wolaita, Kingdom of Martabam-hongsawatoi, Japan, Havilah, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Chinland, Calvinist Republic of Ghent,
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Location: KML, Cluster Map, Maps,
| Type | Subtype | Date | Description | Notes | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| commons | image | H3 rocket model in Kakamigahara Aerospace Science Museum November 8, 2019 01 | Commons | ||
| commons | image | H3 rocket model in Kakamigahara Aerospace Science Museum November 8, 2019 02 | Commons | ||
| commons | image | Models of rockets of JAXA, at the Mitsubishi Minatomirai Industrial Museum | Commons | ||
| commons | image | Spacecraft models at Tsukuba Space Center | Commons | ||
| commons | image | Spacecraft models at Tsukuba Space Center | Commons | ||
| commons | image | SRB-3 model | Commons | ||
| commons | image | Spacecraft models at Tsukuba Space Center | Commons | ||
| commons | image | Spacecraft models at Tsukuba Space Center | Commons | ||
| commons | image | Spacecraft models at Tsukuba Space Center | Commons | ||
| commons | image | Spacecraft models at Tsukuba Space Center | Commons | ||









