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| PSLV Successfully Launches Ten Satellites |
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In its thirteenth flight conducted
from Satish Dhawan Space Centre (SDSC) SHAR, Sriharikota, today (April 28, 2008),
ISROs Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle, PSLV-C9, successfully launched the
690 kg Indian remote sensing satellite CARTOSAT-2A, the 83 kg Indian Mini Satellite
(IMS-1) and eight nanosatellites for international customers into a 637 km polar
Sun Synchronous Orbit (SSO). PSLV-C9 in its core alone configuration
launched ten satellites with a total weight of about 820 kg.
After the
final count down, PSLV-C9 lifted off from the second launch pad at SDSC SHAR,
at 09:24 Hrs IST with the ignition of the core first stage. The important flight
events included the separation of the first stage, ignition of the second stage,
separation of the heatshield at about 125 km altitude after the vehicle had cleared
the dense atmosphere, second stage separation, third stage ignition, third stage
separation, fourth stage ignition and fourth stage cut-off.
The 690 kg
main payload, CARTOSAT-2A, was the first satellite to be injected into orbit at
885 seconds after lift-off at an altitude of 637 km. About 45 seconds later, Indian
Mini Satellite (IMS-1) was separated after which all the nano satellites were
separated in sequence. The initial signals indicate normal health of the satellites CARTOSAT-2A
CARTOSAT-2A is a state-of-the
art remote sensing satellite with a spatial resolution of about one metre
and swath of 9.6 km. The satellite carries a panchromatic camera (PAN) capable
of taking black-and-white pictures in the visible region of electromagnetic spectrum.
The highly agile CARTOSAT-2A is steerable along as well as across the direction
of its movement to facilitate imaging of any area more frequently.
Soon
after separation from PSLV fourth stage, the two solar panels of CARTOSAT-2A were
automatically deployed. The satellites health is continuously monitored
from the Spacecraft Control Centre at Bangalore with the help of ISTRAC network
of stations at Bangalore, Lucknow, Mauritius, Bearslake in Russia, Biak in Indonesia
and Svalbard in Norway.
High-resolution data from CARTOSAT-2A will be invaluable
in urban and rural development applications calling for large scale mapping.
Indian
Mini Satellite (IMS -1) Indian
Mini Satellite (IMS-1), flown as an auxiliary payload on board PSLV-C9,
is developed by ISRO for remote sensing applications. Weighing 83 Kg at lift-off,
IMS-1 incorporates many new technologies and has miniaturised subsystems. IMS-1
carries two remote sensing payloads - A Multi-spectral camera (Mx Payload) and
a Hyper-spectral camera (HySI Payload), operating in the visible and near infrared
regions of the electromagnetic spectrum. The spatial resolution of Mx camera is
37 metre with a swath of 151 km while that of HySI is about 506 metre with a swath
of about 130 km. The data from this mission will be made available to interested
space agencies and student community from developing countries to provide necessary
impetus to capacity building in using satellite data. The versatile IMS-1 has
been specifically developed to carry different payloads in future without significant
changes in it and has a design life time of two years.
Nano
Satellites for International Customers Eight Nanosatellites
from abroad are carried as auxiliary payloads besides IMS-1 as well as CARTOSAT-2A.
The total weight of these Nanosatellite payloads is about 50 Kg. Six of the eight
Nanosatellites are clustered together with the collective name NLS-4. The other
two nanosatellites are NLS-5 AND RUBIN-8. NLS-4, developed by University of Toronto,
Canada consists of six nano-satellites developed by various universities. Two
of them - CUTE 1.7 and SEEDS - are built in Japan, while the other four - CAN-X2,
AAUSAT-II, COMPASS-1 and DELPHI-C3 are built in Canada, Denmark, Germany and the
Netherlands respectively. NLS-5 is also built by University of Toronto and RUBIN-8
is built by Cosmos International, Germany. The eight nanosatellite payloads of
PSLV-C9 are built to develop nano technologies for use in satellites as well as
for the development of technologies for satellite applications.
In its
twelve consecutively successful flights so far, PSLV has repeatedly proved itself
as a reliable and versatile workhorse launch vehicle. It has demonstrated multiple
satellite launch capability having launched a total of sixteen satellites for
international customers besides thirteen Indian payloads which are for remote
sensing, amateur radio communications and Space capsule Recovery Experiment (SRE-1).
PSLV was used to launch ISROs exclusive meteorological satellite, KALPANA-1,
into a Geosynchronous Transfer Orbit (GTO) in September 2002 and thus proved its
versatility. The same vehicle will be used to launch Chandrayaan-1 spacecraft,
Indias first mission to Moon during this year. Source:
Press Inormation Bureau Date: April 28, 2008 |