Mitsubishi Heavy Industries (MHI) and JAXA are responsible for the design, manufacture, and operation of the H3.
global.jaxa.jp/projects/rockets/h3
mhi.com/products/space/launch_srv_lineup.html#pdh3
H3 (rocket) on Wikipedia
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Mitsubishi Heavy Industries (MHI) and JAXA are responsible for the design, manufacture, and operation of the H3.
global.jaxa.jp/projects/rockets/h3
mhi.com/products/space/launch_srv_lineup.html#pdh3
H3 (rocket) on Wikipedia
https://youtu.be/o0BZanDAWnA
The first launch of the H3 Launch Vehicle (H3/TF1)
Mar 7, 2023
Quote:
The first H3 Launch Vehicle (H3/TF1:Test Flight No.1) launched the Advanced Land Observing Satellite-3 (ALOS-3) “Daichi-3” from the Tanegashima Space Center, on 7 March 2023, at 01:37 UTC (10:37 local time). Because the second stage engine did not ignite as planned, a disctruct command has been sent and the mission was declared lost. The H3 Launch Vehicle is JAXA’s “new flagship rocket aiming at achieving high flexibility, high reliability, and high cost performance”. H3 is designed to offer several variants with “two types of fairings, two or three first-stage engines (LE-9), and zero, two or four solid rocket boosters (SRB-3) to deal with various payload sizes and orbits”.
https://youtu.be/u_Krzb_QaWk?si=uy-lCotP9Ltqqj8M
The second launch of the H3 Launch Vehicle (H3TF2)
Feb 17, 2024
Quote:
The second H3 Launch Vehicle (H3TF2 - Test Flight No.2) launched the Vehicle Evaluation Payload-4 (VEP-4), along with two small secondary payloads: CE-SAT-IE and TIRSAT, from the Tanegashima Space Center, on 17 February 2024, at 00:22 UTC (09:22 local time). The H3 Launch Vehicle is JAXA’s “new flagship rocket aiming at achieving high flexibility, high reliability, and high cost performance”. H3 is designed to offer several variants with “two types of fairings, two or three first-stage engines (LE-9), and zero, two or four solid rocket boosters (SRB-3) to deal with various payload sizes and orbits”.