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  • Lessons from Half a Century Experience of Japanese Rocketry since Pencil Rocket

    Paper number

    IAC-05-E4.4.01

    Author

    Prof. Yasunori Matogawa, Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA), Japan

    Year

    2005

    Abstract
    50 years have passed since a tiny rocket "Pencil" was launched horizontally at Kokubunji near Tokyo in 1955.  Though there existed high level of rocket technology in Japan before the end of the second World War, it was not succeeded by the country after the War.  Pencil therefore the substantial start of Japanese rocketry that opened the way to the present stage.  In the meantime, a rocket group of the University of Tokyo contributed to the International Geophysical Year in 1957-58 by developing bigger rockets, and in 1970 the group succeeded in injecting Japanese first satellite OHSUMI into earth orbit.  It was just before the launch of OHSUMI that Japan build up the double feature system of science and applications in space efforts.  The former has been pursued by ISAS (the Institute of Space and Astronautical Science) of the University of Tokyo, and the latter by NASDA (National Space Development Agency).  This unique system worked quite efficiently because space activities in scientific and applicational areas could develop rather independently without affecting each other.  Thus Japan’s space science ran up rapidly to the international stage under the support of solid propellant rocket technology, and, after over 20 years’ technological introduction period from the U. S., a big launch vehicle, H-II at last was developed on the basis of Japan’s own technology early 1990’s.  On October 1, 2003, as a part of Governmental Reform, three Japanese space agencies were consolidated into a single agency, JAXA (Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency), and Japan’s space efforts began to walk toward the future in globally coordinated fashion, including from aeronautics, astronautics, space science, satellite technology, etc., at the same time.  This paper surveys the history of Japanese rocketry briefly, and draws out the lessons from it to make a new history of Japan’s space efforts more meaningful.
    Abstract document

    IAC-05-E4.4.01.pdf

    Manuscript document

    IAC-05-E4.4.01.pdf (🔒 authorized access only).

    To get the manuscript, please contact IAF Secretariat.