HIGHLIGHTS
·
India has successfully
launched 79 satellites for international customers
·
This was PSLV's longest
launch spread over two hours and 15 minutes
·
The mission life of the
satellite is five years
India on Monday
morning successfully put into orbit its own weather satellite SCATSAT-1 and
seven others - five foreign and two domestic - in a copy book style.
With this, India
successfully completed yet another multiple satellite launch in a single rocket
mission and is marching forward towards the milestone of 100 foreign satellite
launches.
With this success,
India has successfully launched 79 satellites for international customers.
Interestingly, this
was also PSLV's longest launch spread over two hours and 15 minutes.
The Indian space
agency Isro also put into commercial use its multiple burn technology in its
rocketPolar
Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV). Simply put multiple burn technology
is the switching off and switching on of a rocket's engine in space mainly to
deliver satellites in two different orbits.
"Today is a land
mark day. Using the PSLV rocket we achieved he launch of eight
satellites," A.S.Kiran Kumar, Chairman, Indian
Space Research Organisation (ISRO) said soon after the launch.
"After a long gap
of two hours, the entire mission was completed successfully," the chairman
added.
Vikram Sarabhai Space
Centre (VSSC) director K. Sivan said, "The mission was exciting and the
longest one. The other landmark mission to be done this year will be the
GSLV-Mk 3 rocket."
Exactly at 9.12am the
PSLV rocket standing 44.4 metres tall and weighing 320 tonnes tore into the
morning skies with fierce orange flames at its tail.
Gathering speed every
second the rocket raced towards the heavens amidst the cheers of the Isro
officials and the media team assembled at the rocket port here.
At the rocket mission
control room, Indian space scientists at Isro were glued to their computer
screens watching the rocket escaping the earth's gravitational pull.
Seventeen minutes into
the flight the rocket's main cargo, the 371kg SCATSAT-1 - for ocean and weather
related studies - was injected into a 730 km polar sun synchronous orbit.
The remaining seven
satellites were also placed in a 689 km polar orbit after a long time lag.
These seven satellites
include five foreign satellites: three from Algeria (Alsat-1B 103kg, Alsat-2B
117kg, Alsat-1N 7kg), and one each from Canada (NLS-19, 8kg) and US
(Pathfinder-44kg).
The two other Indian
satellites are: Pratham (10kg) built by Indian Institute of Technology-Bombay
(IIT-B) and Pisat (5.25 kg) from PES University, Bengaluru and its consortium.
Although SCATSAT-1 is
a follow-on mission for Oceansat-2 improvements have been made in the
satellite's hardware configuration based on lessons learnt from Oceansat-2
instruments.
Also SCATSAT-1's
payload has been characterised with the objective of achieving data quality for
Climate Data Records, apart from facilitating routine meteorological
applications, the Isro said.
The Isro said,
SCATSAT-1's scatterometer will provide wind vector data products for weather
forecasting, cyclone detection and tracking services to the users.
The satellite carries
Ku-band scatterometer similar to the one flown onboard Oceansat-2.
The mission life of
the satellite is five years.
According to Isro, the
two Algerian satellites Alsat-1B and Alsat-2B are remote sensing satellites
while Alsat-1N is a technology demonstration nano satellite for Algerian
students.
On the other hand, the
US satellite Pathfinder-1 is a commercial high resolution imaging micro
satellite while the Canadian NLS-19 satellite is la technology demonstration
nano satellite for experimentation in helping to reduce space debris and for
tracking commercial aircraft.
The IIT-B's satellite
Pratham's mission objective is to estimate the total electron count with a
resolution of 1km x 1km location grid while Pisat from PES University and its
consortium is a nano satellite for remote sensing applications.
After slinging
SCATSAT-1 into its orbit the rocket's fourth stage was restarted one hour 22
minutes into the flight and cut off around 20 seconds later.
Two hours and 11
minutes into the flight the fourth stage was again be restarted to be cut off
one minute later.
Following that in
three minutes all the seven satellites were ejected putting an end to PSLV's
longest mission till date.
The PSLV rocket is a
four stage/engine rocket powered by solid and liquid fuel alternatively.
On Sunday, Sivan told
IANS that the long time gap between the cutting off of the engine and its
restart was not an issue.
The director said the
first time the multiple burn technology was first tested by Isro while flying
its PSLV rocket on December 16 2015 and in June 2016, the technology was again
demonstrated.
About the challenge,
Sivan said: "After cutting off the engine, its condition should be brought
to such a stage that it could be restarted again. The next challenge is to
controlling the engine and bringing it so as to eject the remaining satellites
into a different orbit."
He said the rocket has GPS aided navigation
system so that data generated by the rocket's inertial navigation system and
the one provided by the former will be blended so as to erase and errors and to
generate a precise data.
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