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South Korea Sends Its Largest Satellite Yet into Orbit in Major Step for National Space Program

by Andrew Powell
November 26, 2025 at 12:30 pm
in News
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South Korea Sends Its Largest Satellite Yet into Orbit in Major Step for National Space Program

GOHEUNG-GUN, SOUTH KOREA - JUNE 21: In this handout image provided by Korea Aerospace Research Institute, a space rocket Nuri (KSLV-â…¡) taking off from its launch pad at the Naro Space Center on June 21, 2022 in UGoheung-gun, South Korea. South Korea on Tuesday successfully launched its homegrown space rocket Nuri (KSLV-â…¡) in the second attempt to put satellites into orbit, reaching a major milestone in the country's space program. (Photo by Korea Aerospace Research Institute via Getty Images)

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South Korea marked a significant milestone early Thursday with the launch of its largest satellite to date aboard its domestically built Nuri rocket.

According to The Associated Press, the three-stage rocket lifted off from the nation’s island-based spaceport in the southwestern coastal county of Goheung. 

It is the fourth launch in South Korea’s six-mission plan set to run through 2027.

Aerospace officials monitored the rocket closely as it aimed to place a 516-kilogram (1,137-pound) science satellite into orbit, along with 12 microsatellites developed by universities and research teams.

The primary satellite is engineered to travel roughly 600 kilometers (372 miles) above Earth. It carries a wide-range airglow camera intended to capture auroral activity. It also includes dedicated systems to measure plasma, magnetic fields and to assess how life-science experiments perform in space.

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The dozen smaller cube satellites each serve different missions. University teams and research institutions equipped them with tools such as GPS-based systems designed to analyze Earth’s atmosphere and infrared cameras built to track plastic pollution in the oceans. 

Others carry technology for testing solar cells or communications equipment under space conditions.

Thursday’s flight marked the first time a Nuri rocket has launched since May 2023. During that previous mission, the rocket successfully deployed a 180-kilogram (397-pound) observation satellite into orbit. 

The latest launch is the fourth overall since the rocket’s debut attempt in October 2021, when the vehicle reached its target altitude but failed to deliver a dummy payload.

The continued development and deployment of the Nuri rocket represent a major component of South Korea’s effort to expand its capabilities in space technology, scientific research, and satellite operations.

Tags: Nuri rocketSateliteSouth KoreaSpace programworld news
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Andrew Powell

Andrew Powell

IJR, Contributor Writer

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