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China’s 120,000-Ton Orbital Carrier Could Circle the Globe

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Last weekend, a China Central Television YouTube channel shared a video showing off some recent developments in autonomous aerial vehicles. There were plenty of quotidian craft on display, like the Wing Loong II Long Range Drone and the Lanying R6000 Tiltrotor — remarkable achievements for a nation barely a century removed from semi-feudal rule to be sure, but not exactly breaking news. One segment of the video, however, showcased a conceptual spacecraft called the Luan Niao, an orbital mothership designed to launch uncrewed fighter drones and “hyper-ballistic missiles” from the edge of space.

China’s 120,000-Ton Orbital Carrier Could Circle the Globe

Luan Niao: A Behemoth Orbital Mothership

According to the Telegraph, the Luan Niao design specs point to a behemoth spaceship that would measure nearly 244 meters nose-to-tail and span about 684 meters in width. With that size, designers say it could weigh as much as 120,000 metric tons, with a payload of 88 “Xuan Nu” autonomous fighter drones that operate in the upper limits of the stratosphere.

Luan Niao: A Behemoth Orbital Mothership

Xuan Nu Fighter Concept: A 6th‑Generation Dream

Xuan Nu fighters are also a conceptual spacecraft, a hypothetical 6th generation jet showcased at tech exhibitions to get students and the public hyped for careers in engineering and science. The Xuan Nu fighter concept has been circling around aerospace trade shows since at least 2019, while the idea for the Luan Niao dates back a full decade. However, both craft have been newly revived as audacious 3D renders for the “South Heaven Gate Project,” a coordinated push to align China’s aerospace and defense sectors around a common — if far fetched — goal.

Xuan Nu Fighter Concept: A 6th‑Generation Dream

Public Reaction and Feasibility

The South Heaven Gate announcement by state media sparked a number of excited posts from Chinese netizens, including fictional stories set in a near future where the People’s Republic has a fleet of Luan Niao carriers circling the globe. If the massive spacecraft ever makes it to reality, it would “outclass pretty much everyone,” Peter Layton, defense expert and fellow at Australia’s Griffith Asia Institute told the Telegraph. Layton noted that the Luan Niao would allow China’s military to deploy military assets pretty much anywhere it wants in the world: “You’re also out of range of the weather, generally speaking — and you’re out of range of most defensive systems.” The tremendous energy required to launch a 120,000 ton craft makes the Laun Niao and its drone fleet a distant fantasy. But given China’s rapid pace of technological development in recent years, what seems impossible today may not stay that way for long. More on China: The Amount of New Solar Power Production Capacity China Is Manufacturing Is Legitimately Mind-Blowing I’m a tech and transit correspondent for Futurism, where my beat includes transportation, infrastructure, and the role of emerging technologies in governance, surveillance, and labor.

Public Reaction and Feasibility

About the Author

I’m a tech and transit correspondent for Futurism, where my beat includes transportation, infrastructure, and the role of emerging technologies in governance, surveillance, and labor.

About the Author

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