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Suborbital Flights by the Numbers

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The world’s first cryptonaut, Victor Correa Hespanha, gets a high five as he emerges from the New Shepard capsule after his spaceflight. (Credit: Blue Origin)

by Douglas Messier
Managing Editor

With Blue Origin regularly launching people into space from West Texas, the once sleepy suborbital space sector has raised its profile over the past year or so. But, New Shepard flights are not the only interesting suborbital flights being conducted. New launch vehicles — including ones that would compete with New Shepard — are being developed around the world. And valuable scientific research is being undertaken.

Let’s take a look at suborbital launches that do not involve the testing of ballistic or hypersonic missiles during the first eight months of the year.

Suborbital Launches

There were 34 suborbital launches that did not involve tests of new missiles. Seventeen different types of rockets flew from 16 locations in 10 different countries on four continents. Thirteen launches were conducted in the United States, seven in China, four in Australia, two apiece in Japan, Norway and South Korea, and one each in India, Iran, North Korea and Sweden.

Suborbital Launches (Excluding Weapons Tests)
Jan. 1 – Sept. 9, 2022

Date Launch Vehicle Organization(s) Launch Site Purpose Outcome
Jan. 9, 2022 Black Brant IX NASA – University of Miami Wallops (USA) X-ray astronomy Success
Jan. 23, 2022 Tianxing II Space Transportation (Beijing Lingkong Tianxing Technology) Jiuquan (?) (China) Suborbital spaceplane & hypersonic transport vehicle development Success
Jan. 24, 2022 Tianxing I Space Transportation (Beijing Lingkong Tianxing Technology) Jiuquan (?)(China) Suborbital spaceplane & hypersonic transport vehicle development Success
Jan. 29, 2022 Improved Malemute German Aerospace Center (DLR) Esrange (Sweden) Microgravity research Success | Apogee: 253.6 km (157.6 miles)
Feb. 26, 2022 Hwasong-17 KPA Strategic Rocket Force – National Aerospace Development Administration Sunan (North Korea) Tested imaging system for future reconnaissance satellite Success | Apogee: ~620 km (385.3 miles)
March 5, 2022 Black Brant IX NASA Poker Flat (USA) Auroral science Success | Apogee: 429 km (266.6 miles)
March 9, 2022 Black Brant IX NASA – U.S. Naval Research Laboratory White Sands (USA) Solar observation Success | Apogee: 302 km (187.7 miles)
March 17, 2022 Tianxing II Space Transportation (Beijing Lingkong Tianxing Technology) Jiuquan (?) (China) Suborbital spaceplane & hypersonic transport vehicle development Success
March 21, 2022 Terrier-improved Malemute NASA — U.S. Air Force Wallops (USA) Laminar- turbulent transition measurements Success
March 24, 2022 Blue Whale 0.1 Perigee Aerospace – Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST) Jeju Island (South Korea) Third flight test of smallsat launcher Success
March 30, 2022 Solid Fuel Space Projectile Ministry of National Defense Jackup sea installation (South Korea) Smallsat launcher flight test Success | Dummy satellite
March 31, 2022 New Shepard Blue Origin Corn Ranch (USA) Space tourism Success | Six people flown on fourth human flight | Apogee: 107 km (66.5 miles)
April 7, 2022 Black Brant IX NASA – Clemson University Poker Flat (USA) Auroral science Success | Apogee: 339.6 km (211 miles)
April 7, 2022 Terrier-Improved Malemute NASA – Clemson University Poker Flat (USA) Auroral science Success | Apogee: 207.6 km (129 miles)
April 19, 2022 Tianxing II Space Transportation (Beijing Lingkong Tianxing Technology) Jiuquan (?) (China) Suborbital spaceplane & hypersonic transport vehicle development Success
April 25, 2022 Tianxing I Space Transportation (Beijing Lingkong Tianxing Technology) Jiuquan (?) (China) Suborbital spaceplane & hypersonic transport vehicle development Success
May 4, 2022 Tianxing I Space Transportation (Beijing Lingkong Tianxing Technology) Jiuquan (?) (China) Suborbital spaceplane & hypersonic transport vehicle development Success
May 11, 2022 Oriole III-A NASA Svalbard (Norway) Ionospheric research Success | Apogee: 767 km (476.6 miles); first flight of Oriole III-A
June 4, 2022 New Shepard Blue Origin Corn Ranch (USA) Space tourism Success | Six people flown on fifth human flight | Apogee: 107 km (66.5 miles)
June 24, 2022 Terrier-Improved Orion NASA – Colorado Space Grant Consortium Wallops Flight Facility (USA) Education Success | Apogee: 113.5 km (70.5 miles)
June 26, 2022 Black Brant IX NASA – University of Wisconsin – Madison Arnhem Space Centre (Australia) X-ray astronomy First launch from Australian commercial spaceport | Apogee: 327 km (203.2 miles)
June 26, 2022 Zulijanah Iranian Space Agency Semnan (Iran) Flight test Success
June 26, 2022 VSB-30 Improved Orion German Aerospace Center (DLR) Andoya (Norway) Reusable launch vehicle technology test Success | Apogee: 38 km (23.6 miles) | Velocity: Mach 8
July 6, 2022 Black Brant IX NASA/CU Boulder Arnhem (Australia) UV spectroscopy Success | Apogee: 243 km (151 miles)
July 11, 2022 Black Brant IX NASA/CU Boulder Arnhem (Australia) UV astronomy Success | Apogee: 261 km (162 miles)
July 23, 2022 S-520 JAXA Uchinoura (Japan) Supersonic combustion flight test Success | Apogee: 168 km (104 miles)
Aug. 4, 2022 New Shepard Blue Origin Corn Ranch (USA) Space tourism Success | Six people flown on sixth human flight | Apogee: 107 km (66.5 miles)
Aug. 11, 2022 S-520 JAXA/Toyama Prefectural University Uchinoura (Japan) Ionospheric research Success: Apogee: 279 km (173 miles)
Aug. 11, 2022 Terrier-Improved Malemute NASA/Colorado Space Grant Consortium Wallops Flight Facility (USA) Education Success | Apogee: 159 km (99 miles)
Aug. 22, 2022 Black Brant IX NASA/Northwestern University White Sands (USA) X-ray astronomy Success | Apogee: 254 km (158 miles)
Aug. 24, 2022 Terrier-Improved Malemute NASA/Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University Wallops Flight Facility (USA) Sporadic-E ElectroDynamics Demonstration mission (SpEED Demon) technology demonstration Success | Apogee: 160 km (100 miles)
Aug. 25, 2022 Reusable Suborbital Carrier China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center (China) Flight test; landed at Alxa Right Banner Badanjilin Airport Success
Sept. 2, 2022 DART T-Minus Engineering Dart/Ascension Koonibba Test Range (Australia) Technology demonstration Failure
Sept. 3, 2022 RH-300 Mk II Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) Thumba Equatorial Rocket Launching Station (India) Inflatable Aerodynamic Decelerator Success | Apogee: 84 km (52.2 miles)
Source: Wikipedia & original research

Suborbital Launches by Organization

NASA led the world by conducting 14 suborbital flights from five locations on three continents using four different types of suborbital rockets.

Suborbital Launches by Organization (Excluding Weapons Tests)
Jan. 1 – Sept. 9, 2022

Organization Partner(s) Purpose(s) Launch Vehicle(s) Launch Site(s) Launches
NASA U.S. Air Force, U.S. Naval Research Laboratory, Clemson University, Colorado Space Grant Consortium, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, Northwestern University, University of Colorado at Boulder, University of Miami, University of Wisconsin – Madison Auroral science (3), x-ray astronomy (3), education (2), electro dynamic flight test (1), ionospheric research (1), Laminar-turbulent transition (1), solar observation (1), UV astronomy (1), UV spectroscopy (1) Black Brant IX (8), Terrier-Improved Malemute (4), Terrier-Improved Orion (1), Oriole III-A (1) Wallops Island (5), Arnhem (3), Poker Flat (3), White Sands (2), Svalbard (1) 14
Space Transportation (Beijing Lingkong Tianxing Technology) Suborbital spaceplane & hypersonic transport vehicle development Tianxing I, Tianxing II Jiuquan (?) (China) 6
Blue Origin Multiple Fourth, fifth and sixth human spaceflights, 18 people flown New Shepard Corn Ranch (USA) 3
German Aerospace Center (DLR) Technical University of Munich, University of Arizona Microgravity research, reusable launch vehicle technology test Improved Malemute, VSB-30 Improved Orion Andoya (Norway), Esrange (Sweden) 2
JAXA Toyama Prefectural University Supersonic combustion flight test; ionospheric research S-520 Uchinoura (Japan) 2
China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation Flight test; launched vertically, landed horizontally at Alxa Right Banner Badanjilin Airport Reusable Suborbital Carrier Jiuquan (China) 1
Indian Space Research Organisation Inflatable Aerodynamic Accelerator flight test RH-300 Mk II Thumba Equatorial Rocket Launching Station (India) 1
Iranian Space Agency Smallsat launcher flight test Zulijanah Semnan (Iran) 1
KPA Strategic Rocket Force National Aerospace Development Administration Tested imaging system for future reconnaissance satellite Hwasong-17 Sunan (North Korea) 1
Perigee Aerospace Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST) Third flight test of smallsat launcher Blue Whale 0.1 Jeju Island (South Korea) 1
South Korea Ministry of National Defense Smallsat launcher flight test Solid Fuel Space Projectile Jackup sea installation (South Korea) 1
T-Minus Engineering Ascension Technology demonstration DART Koonibba Test Range (Australia) 1*
Total 34
Source: Wikipedia & original research
* Launch failure

Blue Origin Crewed Flights

New Shepard NS-21 spaceflight participants (left to right) Victor Correa Hespanha, Victor Vescovo, Katya Echazarreta, Hamish Harding, Jaison Rainbow and Evan Dick float happily in zero gravity. (Credit: Blue Origin)

Blue Origin’s three New Shepard flights carried 18 spaceflight participants.

New Shepard Flights
Jan. 1 – Sept. 9, 2022

Date Vehicle Company Location Payloads Notes
March 31, 2022 New Shepard (NS-20) Blue Origin Corn Ranch (Texas) Marty Allen, Sharon Hagle, Marc Hagle, Jim Kitchen, George Nield, Gary Lai Fourth New Shepard human flight, 107 km (66.5 miles) apogee
June 4, 2022 New Shepard (NS-21) Blue Origin Corn Ranch (Texas) Evan Dick, Katya Echazarreta, Hamish Harding, Victor Correa Hespanha, Jaison Robinson, Victor Vescovo Fifth New Shepard human flight, 107 km (66.5 miles) apogee
August 4, 2022 New Shepard (NS-22) Blue Origin Corn Ranch (Texas) Coby Cotton, Mario Ferreira, Clint Kelly III, Sara Sabry, Vanessa O’Brien, Steve Young Sixth New Shepard human flight
Source: Blue Origin

Suborbital Launches for Booster & Technology Development

South Korea’s solid-fuel space projectile launches on a flight test on March 30, 2022 (Credit: South Korea Ministry of National Defense)

Sixteen of the 34 launches were focused on the development of new boosters and space technology.

Suborbital Launches for Launch Vehicle & Technology Development (Excluding Weapons Tests)
Jan. 1 – Sept. 9, 2022

Purpose Launch Vehicle(s) Launch Site Organization(s) Partner(s) Launches
Suborbital spaceplane & hypersonic transport vehicle development Tianxing I, Tianxing II Jiuquan (?) (China) Space Transportation (Beijing Lingkong Tianxing Technology) 6
Second reusable suborbital launch flight test Reusable Suborbital Carrier Jiuquan China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation 1
Orbital booster flight test Blue Whale 0.1 Jeju Island (South Korea) Perigee Aerospace South Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology 1
Orbital booster flight test Solid-fuel Space Projectile Jackup sea installation (South Korea) South Korea Ministry of National Defense 1
Orbital booster flight test Zulijanah Semnan (Iran) Iranian Space Agency 1
Supersonic combustion flight test S-520 Uchinoura (Japan) JAXA 1
Reconnaissance satellite imaging system test Hwasong-17 Sunan (North Korea) KPA Strategic Rocket Force (North Korea) National Aerospace Development Administration 1
Reusable launch vehicle technology test VSB-30 Improved Orion Andoya (Norway) German Aerospace Center (DLR) Technical University of Munich, University of Arizona 1
Sporadic-E Electro Dynamics Demonstration mission (SpEED Demon) technology demonstration Terrier-improved Malemute Wallops (USA) NASA Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University 1
Inflatable Aerodynamic Decelerator RH-300 Mk II Thumba Equatorial Rocket Launching Station (India) Indian Space Research Organisation 1
Technology demonstration DART Koonibba Test Range (Australia) T-Minus Engineering Ascension 1*
Total 16
Source: Wikipedia and original research
* Launch failure

Suborbital Launches for Science & Education

A Black Brant IX rocket launches from Poker Flat Research Range on March 5, 2022. (Credit: NASA/Terry Zaperach)

Fifteen launches were dedicated to scientific research and two were focused on education.

2022 Suborbital Launches for Science and Education
Jan. 1 – Sept. 9, 2022

Purpose Launch Vehicle(s) Launch Site(s) Organization(s) Launches
Auroral science Black Brant IX (2), Terrier-Improved Malemute (I) Poker Flat (USA) NASA, Clemson University 3
X-ray astronomy Black Brant IX Arnhem (Australia), Wallops (USA), White Sands (USA) NASA, Northwestern University, University of Miami, University of Wisconsin – Madison 3
Education Terrier-Improved Orion Wallops (USA) NASA – Colorado Space Grant Consortium 2
Ionospheric research Oriole III-A, S-520 Svalbard (Norway), Uchinoura (Japan) NASA, JAXA – Toyama Prefectural University 2
Microgravity research Improved Malemute, New Shepard Esrange (Sweden) DLR 1
Laminar–turbulent transition measurements Terrier-improved Malemute Wallops (USA) NASA – U.S. Air Force 1
Solar observation Black Brant IX White Sands (USA) NASA – U.S. Naval Research Laboratory 1
UV astronomy Black Brant IX Arnhem (Australia) NASA – UC Boulder 1
UV spectroscopy Black Brant IX Arnhem (Australia) NASA – UC Boulder 1
Total 15
Source: Wikipedia & original research

Suborbital Launches by Location

Sounding rocket launch at Andoya. (Credit: Norwegian Space Agency)

Suborbital launches were conducted from 16 locations in 10 nations.

Suborbital Launches by Location (Excluding Weapons Tests)
Jan. 1 – Sept. 9, 2022

Launch Site Launch Vehicle(s) Organization Partner(s) Purpose(s) Launches
Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center (China) Tianxing I, Tianxing II, Reusable Suborbital Carrier Space Transportation (Beijing Lingkong Tianxing Technology) (6), China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation (1) Suborbital spaceplane & hypersonic transport vehicle development, reusable suborbital carrier flight test 7
NASA Wallops Flight Facility (Virginia, USA) Terrier-improved Malemute (3), Terrier-Improved Orion (1), Black Brant IX (1) NASA U.S. Air Force, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, Colorado Space Grant Consortium, University of Miami x-ray astronomy, research, education 5
Corn Ranch (Texas, USA) New Shepard Blue Origin Various New Shepard fourth, fifth and six human spaceflights, 18 people flown; microgravity flight with 32 payloads 3
Poker Flat Research Range (Alaska, USA) Black Brant IX (2), Terrier-Improved Malemute NASA Clemson University Auroral science 3
Arnhem Space Centre (Australia) Black Brant IX NASA University of Wisconsin – Madison, University of Colorado at Boulder X-ray astronomy, UV spectroscopy, UV astronomy; first launch from Australian commercial spaceport 3
Uchinoura (Japan) S-520 JAXA Toyama Prefectural University Supersonic combustion flight test, ionospheric research 2
White Sands Missile Range (New Mexico, USA) Black Brant IX NASA Northwestern University, U.S. Naval Research Laboratory Solar observatory, x-ray astronomy 2
Andoya Space (Norway) VSB-30 Improved Orion German Aerospace Center Reusable launch vehicle technology test 1
Esrange Space Center (Sweden) Improved Malemute German Aerospace Center Microgravity research 1
Jackup Sea Installation (South Korea) Solid Fuel Space Projectile Ministry of National Defense Small satellite launch vehicle flight test 1
Jeju Island (South Korea) Blue Whale 0.1 Perigee Aerospace South Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology Small satellite launch vehicle test 1
Koonibba Test Range (Australia) DART T-Minus Engineering Ascension Technology demonstration 1
Semnan Space Center (Iran) Zulijanah Iranian Space Agency Small satellite launch vehicle test 1
Sunan International Airport (North Korea) Hwasong-17 KPA Strategic Rocket Force National Aerospace Development Administration Test of imaging system for reconnaissance satellite 1
Svalbard Rocket Range (Norway) Oriole III-A NASA Ionospheric research 1
Thumba Equatorial Rocket Launching Station (India) RH-300 Mk II Indian Space Research Organisation Inflatable Aerodynamic Accelerator flight test 1
Total 34
Source: Wikipedia and original research

Suborbital Launches by Booster

Launch of the STORT flight experiment. [Credit: DLR (CC BY-NC-ND 3.0)]

Seventeen different types of boosters were launched 34 times.

Suborbital Launches by Booster (Excluding Weapons Tests)
Jan. – Sept. 9, 2022

Launch Vehicle Organization Partner(s) Purpose(s) Launch Site(s) Launches
Black Brant IX NASA U.S. Naval Research Laboratory, Clemson University, University of Miami, University of Wisconsin – Madison x-ray astronomy (3), auroral science (2), solar observation (1), UV astronomy (1), UV spectroscopy (1) Arnhem (Australia), Poker Flat (USA), Wallops (USA), White Sands (USA) 8
Terrier-improved Malemute NASA Clemson University, Colorado Space Grant Consortium, Embry Riddle Aeronautical University, U.S. Air Force auroral science (1), education (1), laminar – turbulent transition measurements (1), Sporadic-E ElectroDynamics Demonstration mission technology demonstration (1) Poker Flat (USA), Wallops (USA) 4
New Shepard Blue Origin Space tourism Corn Ranch (USA) 3
Tianxing I Space Transportation (Beijing Lingkong Tianxing Technology) Suborbital spaceplane & hypersonic transport vehicle development Jiuquan (?) (China) 3
Tianxing II Space Transportation (Beijing Lingkong Tianxing Technology) Suborbital spaceplane & hypersonic transport vehicle development Jiuquan (?) (China) 3
S-520 JAXA Toyama Prefectural University (ionospheric research) Ionospheric research, supersonic combustion flight test Uchinoura 2
Blue Whale 0.1 Perigee Aerospace Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology Third flight test of small satellite launch vehicle Jeju Island (South Korea) 1
DART T-Minus Engineering Ascension Technology Demonstration Koonibba Test Range (Australia) 1*
Hwasong-17 KPA Strategic Rocket Force National Aerospace Development Administration Test of imaging system for reconnaissance satellite Sunan International Airport 1
Improved Malemute German Aerospace Center (DLR) Microgravity Esrange (Sweden) 1
Oriole III-A NASA Ionospheric research Svalbard (Norway) 1
Reusable Suborbital Carrier China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation Second flight test; landed at Alxa Right Banner Badanjilin Airport Jiuquan (China) 1
RH-300 Mk II Indian Space Research Organisation Inflatable Aerodynamic Decelerator Thumba Equatorial Rocket Launching Station (India) 1
Solid-fuel Space Projectile South Korea Ministry of National Defense Small satellite launcher flight test Jackup Sea Installation (South Korea) 1
Terrier-improved Orion NASA Colorado Space Grant Consortium Education Wallops (USA) 1
VSB-30 Improved Orion German Aerospace Center (DLR) Technical University of Munich, University of Arizona Reusable launch vehicle technology test Andoya (Norway) 1
Zulijanah Iranian Space Agency Second flight test of smallsat orbital vehicle Semnan (Iran) 1
Total 34
Source: Wikipedia & original research
* Launch failure

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