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Japan orders satellite-carrying rocket to self-destruct after failed launch

The Epsilon-6 rocket lifts off from the launch pad at Uchinoura Space Center in Kagoshima Prefecture, southwestern Japan, on Wednesday. Photo by JIJI Press/EPA-EFE
The Epsilon-6 rocket lifts off from the launch pad at Uchinoura Space Center in Kagoshima Prefecture, southwestern Japan, on Wednesday. Photo by JIJI Press/EPA-EFE

Oct. 12 (UPI) -- A Japanese rocket attempting to launch a satellite into space self-destructed after it failed to reach trajectory after liftoff on Wednesday.

The Epsilon-6 rocket took off from the Uchinoura Space Center in Kagoshima Prefecture on Wednesday. The rocket, though, deviated from its intended trajectory shortly after leaving the launching pad.

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Officials from the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency ordered the rocket to self-destruct. It was the first time the space agency had to issue a self-destruct command for one of its rockets since November 2003 when the launch of a satellite-carrying H2A rocket was aborted after one of its two boosters failed to separate.

Wednesday's rocket was carrying eight satellites, including two for commercial use that were developed by a Japanese venture company. It marked the first time an Epsilon series rocket attempted to carry commercial satellites into space.

Other satellites the rocket carried included one that would have conducted a technology demonstration to expand communication capabilities between satellites and its ground network and another that was created with a metal 3-D printer by Waseda University.

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