Nation

ISRO to launch PSLV with Cartosat again

| | Bengaluru

After the unsuccessful mission of the first Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV) launch, the ISRO’s next mission with Cartosat will be during the end of December or the first week of January. Announcing this in Bengaluru on Tuesday on the sidelines of a programme AS Kiran Kumar, Chairman, Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) said its next launch with PSLV will be in end of December or the first week of January.

He said, “We are working towards it. It will be in the end of December or first week of January.”

According to ISRO officials PSLV-C40 will be used for the launch from the spaceport of Sriharikota, and the mission will be a combination of 25 nano satellites, three micro-satellites and one Cartosat satellite, along with "maybe" one university satellite.

The space agency had earlier said that the mission, whose main payload would be the Cartosat-2 series earth observation satellite, along with 29 co-passengers, was scheduled for a December launch. Most co-passengers of Cartosat-2 series satellite would be from foreign countries, including Finland and the US, they had said.

On August 31, India's mission to launch its backup  navigation satellite IRNSS-1H on board PSLV-C39 ended in a  failure after a technical fault on the final leg following a perfect launch.

 

 

 

ISRO then said the heat shield did not separate on the final leg of the launch sequence and, as a result, IRNSS-1H got stuck in the fourth stage of the rocket.

According to ISRO, Cartosat-2 series satellite launch is a follow-on mission in Cartosat-2 series with the primary  objective of providing high resolution scene specific spot  imageries.

 

 

 

It carries Panchromatic and Multi-spectral cameras operating in Time Delay Integration (TDI) mode and is capable  of delivering high resolution data.

 

 

On Chandrayaan-2, Kumar said it was going on track and that the flight hardware was getting assembled and tested. "It is going through various phases. We are targeting for the first quarter of next year," he said.      Chandrayaan-2,India's second mission to the Moon,would be an advanced version of Chandrayaan-1 launched nine years ago.      This spacecraft is a composite model consisting of orbiter, lander and rover.

 

Asked whether the Space Activities Bill, 2017 would come up during the Budget session of Parliament, Kiran Kumar said "We have now put it for public comments. It would have to go through a set of discussions. The process has started."     The draft of the proposed Bill to promote and regulate  space activities of India, along with encouraging the  participation of the private sector, has been uploaded on the ISRO website for comments from stakeholders and the public.

 

Earlier Dr Kiran Kumar inaugurated the Space Technology Gallery at the Visvesvaraya Industrial and Technological Museum in Bengaluru and urged the students to take up Space research as a vocation. He said the country had made several strides in Space research not only as pure research activity but also for development of the country.

Former ISRO Chairman and National Education Policy Committee Chairman Dr K Kasturirangan stressed the need for the next generation to explore space as opportunities and facilities were on the increase with enhanced technological developments.

This would enable to unravel the mystery of the Universe at a greater depth than what was being done at present, he added.