Countdown For ISRO's 100th Satellite Launch Begins, Lift-Off Tomorrow
The 28-hour countdown for the launch of ISRO’s 100th satellite along with 30 others in a single mission, from the space port of Sriharikota, about 110 km from here, began today Thursday Jan 11,2018
On its 42nd mission, the Indian
Space Research Organisation’s (ISRO) trusted workhorse ‘PSLV-C40’ will
carry the weather observation ‘Cartosat-2’ series satellite and 30
co-passengers (together weighing about 613 kg) at lift-off at 9.28 amFriday Jan 12,2018
As the Mission Readiness Review committee and Launch Authorisation Board
cleared the countdown, the space body today said, “The 28-hour
countdown activity of PSLV-C40/Cartosat2 Series Satellite Mission has
started at 05.29 hours IST today". At present, the scientists are
involved in propellant filling operation to carry out various stages of
the flight, it said.
The 44.4-metre tall rocket is all set to lift off from the first launch
pad of the Satish Dhawan Space Centre at Sriharikota. The co-passenger
satellites comprise one micro and nano satellite each from India as well
as three micro and 25 nanosatellites from six countries -- Canada,
Finland, France, Korea, the UK and the US. The total weight of all the
31 satellites carried on-board PSLV-C40 is about 1,323 kg.
The 28 international customer satellites are being launched as part of
the commercial arrangements between ISRO and its commercial arm Antrix
Corporation Ltd. Of the total number of satellites carried by PSLV-C40,
30 satellites will be launched into a 505-km polar Sun Synchronous Orbit
(SSO). Scientists would bring down the height by twice restarting the
fourth stage of the PSLV-C40 for launch of Microsat satellite, which
will be placed in a 359-km polar SSO, ISRO said.
The entire launch of satellites is expected to happen over a period of 2
hours and 21 seconds, it said. According to ISRO, the Cartosat-2 series
satellite launch is a follow-on mission with the primary objective of
providing high resolution scene-specific spot imageries. It carries
panchromatic and multi-spectral cameras operating in Time Delay
Integration mode and is capable of delivering high resolution data.
It will be the third satellite in the Cartosat-2 series. ISRO had
successfully launched Cartosat-2 Series satellite on June 22, 2016. It
is similar to the earlier Cartosat-2, 2A and 2B. The images sent by
Cartosat-2 series satellite will be useful for cartographic
applications, urban and rural applications, coastal land use and
regulation, road network monitoring, water distribution, creation of
land use maps and change detection to bring out geographical Land
Information Systems and Geographical Information System applications.
ISRO Satellite Centre Director M Annadurai had recently said the launch
of 28 satellites from abroad and three Indian satellites during the
mission would mark the roll-out of the 100th satellite by the space
agency. Tomorrow’s launch also marks the first launch for ISRO in 2018,
following the unsuccessful mission of navigation satellite IRNSS-1H last
year.
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