


“I hope our future generations have a great dream and challenge while looking at the Nuri rocket soaring into space.” “Today, we confirmed that dreams can come true,” South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol wrote on Facebook. He said more time is required to confirm the release of the eighth satellite. Lee said seven of the eight satellites including the main one were successfully released from the rocket. Science Minister Lee Jong Ho later told a televised news conference that the launch was successful, saying it proved the rocket’s reliability and South Korea’s potential to operate various satellites and explore space. The domestically built three-stage Nuri rocket lifted off from a launch facility on a southern island with a payload of eight satellites, including a main commercial-grade satellite whose mission is to verify radar imaging technology and observe cosmic radiation in a near-Earth orbit. The South Korean launch Thursday will likely assist its efforts to develop a space-based surveillance system. The two Koreas, technically in a state of war, have no military reconnaissance satellites of their own and both are eager to possess them. SEOUL, South Korea (AP) - South Korea successfully launched a commercial-grade satellite for the first time Thursday as part of its growing space development program, as rival North Korea is pushing to place its first military spy satellite into orbit.
