TiSPACE, officially Taiwan Innovative Space Inc. ( zh, 台灣晉陞太空股份有限公司), is a space launch company from
Taiwan. Its sister company, ATSpace, is headquartered in
South Australia.
History
TiSPACE was founded in 2016 by a group of investors, scientists, and engineers led by Yen-Sen Chen who had previously worked at the
NSPO
Taiwan Space Agency (TASA), formerly the National Space Organization (NSPO), is the national civilian space agency of the Republic of China (Taiwan), under the auspices of the National Science and Technology Council. TASA is involved in the d ...
and at NASA’s
Marshall Space Flight Center
The George C. Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC), located in Redstone Arsenal, Alabama (Huntsville postal address), is the U.S. government's civilian rocketry and spacecraft propulsion research center. As the largest NASA center, MSFC's first ...
.
In 2019 they signed an MOU with
National Central University to promote domestic space launch and the space technology sector. They also attended the
International Astronautical Congress, a first for a Taiwanese company.
TiSPACE scrapped their launch facility in Taiwan due to legal issues. In August 2021 TiSPACE announced plans to launch from the
Whalers Way Orbital Launch Complex
Whalers Way Orbital Launch Complex is a proposed rocket-launching facility operated by Southern Launch at Whalers Way, in the locality of Sleaford near Port Lincoln on South Australia's Eyre Peninsula.
History of the project
Southern Launch es ...
in Australia rather than Taiwan. They received the first flight approval permit ever issued by the Australian government.
ATSpace, TiSPACE's sister company, was founded in January 2021 to develop the company's rocket technologies in Australia. As of August 2022, ATSpace plans to conduct future suborbital test launches at Whalers Way in place of TiSPACE.
Facilities
Structural dynamics tests are performed at the
National Center for Research on Earthquake Engineering
National Center for Research on Earthquake Engineering (NCREE; ) is an organisation in Da'an District, Taipei, Taiwan.
NCREE was established in 1980 by the National Science Council (NSC), and they are working together with the National Taiwan ...
.
Hot fire test facility
TiSPACE conducts engine tests at its vertical hot fire test facility.
Nantian launch facility
TiSPACE’s launch facility is located in the Nantian are of Taitung county. According to TiSPACE the facility features "launch pad, launch support rail, an oxidizer filling facility, vehicle/payload assembly building, launch command center, and tracking/communication antenna."
Launch vehicles
HAPITH I (Kestrel I)
HAPITH I (known as Kestrel I when operated by ATSpace)
is a two stage sub-orbital rocket designed to validate TiSPACE’s
hybrid-propellant rocket system. The HAPITH I has 100% domestically sourced components.
Hapith is
Saisiyat for
flying squirrel
Flying squirrels (scientifically known as Pteromyini or Petauristini) are a tribe of 50 species of squirrels in the family Sciuridae. Despite their name, they are not in fact capable of full flight in the same way as birds or bats, but they ar ...
.
The first launch of the HAPITH I was scheduled for December 27, 2019 but was called off after protest from the local indigenous community. With the blessings of the community the launch was rescheduled for February 13 and was to include a
Paiwan blessing of the rocket. The February 13 launch was scrubbed due to weather. As of August 2021, the first launch of HAPITH I was scheduled to take place at
Whalers Way Orbital Launch Complex
Whalers Way Orbital Launch Complex is a proposed rocket-launching facility operated by Southern Launch at Whalers Way, in the locality of Sleaford near Port Lincoln on South Australia's Eyre Peninsula.
History of the project
Southern Launch es ...
,
South Australia, in late 2021.
On 16 September 2021, 06:39 UTC the Hapith I rocket (flight VS01) launched from Whalers Way Pad 1 on a suborbital test flight. This was the maiden flight of Hapith I and first of three test launches from Pad 1 at Whalers Way.
The flight suffered a launch failure at ignition and did not reach space. Intended apogee of the flight was .
As payload the rocket carried an Ionosphere Scintillation Package (ISP) for
NSPO
Taiwan Space Agency (TASA), formerly the National Space Organization (NSPO), is the national civilian space agency of the Republic of China (Taiwan), under the auspices of the National Science and Technology Council. TASA is involved in the d ...
for the purpose of
Ionospheric scintillation
In astronomy, interplanetary scintillation refers to random fluctuations in the intensity of radio waves of celestial origin, on the timescale of a few seconds. It is analogous to the twinkling one sees looking at stars in the sky at night, but in ...
research.
Two more test launches of the vehicle, conducted by ATSpace under the Kestrel I name, are scheduled for late 2022.
HAPITH I has two stages; the first stage has 4 motors, and the second stage has a single motor. All motors are similar, having a composite outer shell with
styrene-butadiene rubber as fuel and
nitrous oxide as oxidizer.
HAPITH V
The HAPITH V is a three stage orbital rocket in development from the HAPITH I with an approximate height of 20 m, a diameter of 2.2 m, and a first stage thrust of 650 kN. The target payload is 390 kg to LEO and 350 kg to SSO. It will be TiSPACE’s first commercial offering.
HAPITH V has three stages; the first stage has 5 motors, the second stage has 4 motors, and the third stage has a single motor. All motors are similar, having a composite outer shell with
styrene-butadiene rubber as fuel and
nitrous oxide as oxidizer.
See also
*
List of companies of Taiwan
Taiwan maintains a stable industrial economy as a result of economic growth and industrialization during the late 20th century, being dubbed as one of the Four Asian Tigers along with Hong Kong, Singapore and South Korea. It is a member of both ...
*
NewSpace
*
Rocket Lab
*
Advanced Rocket Research Center
*
National Chung-Shan Institute of Science and Technology
References
{{reflist
Taiwanese companies established in 2016
Space program of Taiwan
Private spaceflight companies
Aerospace companies of Taiwan