Japan successfully launched a new rocket Saturday that it hopes  will be a cheaper and more efficient way of sending satellites into space. 
The three-stage Epsilon lifted off from a space centre on Japan’s  southern main island of Kyushu, following a two-week postponement. An earlier  launch last month was aborted 19 seconds before a planned liftoff due to a  computer glitch. 
About an hour after the liftoff, its payload the SPRINT—A, the  first space telescope designed to observe other planets was successfully put  into orbit, said Mari Harada, a spokeswoman at the Japan Aerospace Exploration  Agency, or JAXA. 
The liftoff was broadcast live on television networks, with  footage showing a white, pencil-shaped rocket shot into the sky from the launch  pad after spurting gray smoke and orange flash. 
The agency declared it was a success. 
“It was so thrilled that I was almost speechless,” JAXA President  Naoki Okumura told a televised news conference. “The challenge we had to face  makes the excitement even greater.” 
 

 

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