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bhaskarlive · 1 month
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ISRO to launch Earth-observing satellite on SSLV rocket on Friday
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The Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) on Thursday announced that it will launch an Earth-observing satellite (EOS-08) on the new Small Satellite Launch Vehicle (SSLV) rocket — its third-ever mission — tomorrow.
EOS-08 satellite will be launched atop the SSLV from the Satish Dhawan Space Centre in Sriharikota in Andhra Pradesh on Friday.
Source: bhaskarlive.in
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competitionpedia · 6 months
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Why is ISRO building a second rocket launchport in Tamil Nadu’s Kulasekarapattinam?
The cornerstone for ISRO's second rocket launchpad was laid on February 28 in Kulasekarapattinam, situated in the Thoothukudi district of coastal Tamil Nadu. It will be dedicated solely to commercial, on-demand, and small satellite launches in the future. To know more about Rocket Launch Port in Tamil Nadu, visit: https://competitionpedia.in/…/news-current…/07-03-2024
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news4nose · 1 year
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Today, on Sep 2nd of 2023, the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) launched India’s first space-based solar observatory, PSLV-C57/Aditya-L1 Mission at 11.50 hrs from Sriharikota Space Centre.
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gempac · 1 year
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From Satish Dhawan Space Centre in Sriharikota, ISRO attains a successful launch for the #AdityaL1 mission, exploring the sun's secrets.
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soninews · 1 year
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https://www.youtube.com/live/nF1XH0_24YM?si=9iif3HmIwJHxNMgD
📌आज ठीक 11:50 पर देखे L-1का LIVE प्रसारण 📌
🎤सूरज को खुली आँखों से देखने के लिये PSLV-C57/Aditya-L1 मिशन का श्रीहरिकोटा से सीधा 🔴LIVE प्रसारण 🖥️
🙋‍♂️तुरंत समाचार पाने के लिए हमारे चैनल SONI NEWS को अभी सब्स्क्राइब लाइक और शेयर करे
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ISRO Rocket Carrying 7 Singaporean Satellites Lifts Off From Sriharikota
The PSLV-C56, according to ISRO was launched from the First Launch Pad (FLP) at the Satish Dhawan Space Centre (SDSC), Sriharikota.
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rocknews · 1 year
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GSLV-F12 carrying navigation satellite NVS-01 lifts-off from Sriharikota
The satellite comes with 12 years operational life. It provides new service in L1 band and encompasses indigenously developed Rubidium atomic clock.
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SRIHARIKOTA: The Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) on Monday successfully placed NVS-01, a second-generation navigation satellite, from Satish Dhawan Space Centre, SHAR in Sriharikota.
The national space agency is expanding its regional satellite navigation system — NavIC — with the addition of more powerful and reliable navigation satellites. The first satellite in the new series was launched using a GSLV-F12 rocket. Officials said four more are under production.
These satellites are built with a more operational life of 12 years and incorporate L1 band signals additionally. For the first time, an indigenous atomic clock was flown in NVS-01.
The launch vehicle standing 51.7 metres tall with a mass of 420 tonnes has lifted-off majestically from the second launch pad carrying 2,232 kg payload. The satellite was precisely injected into Geosynchronous Transfer Orbit in about 19 minutes.
ISRO chairman S Somanath declared the mission a success and said the satellite team has taken over to do the subsequent orbit raising maneuvers and to put the satellite into the intended orbit.
The NavIC uses seven satellites to provide real-time positioning and timing services in India and an area extending up to 1,500 km from the country’s borders. However, several satellites that were launched between 2013–2018 have become defunct, thereby hampering its operational capabilities.
According to ISRO, the second-generation navigation satellites will not only ensure continuity of legacy NavIC services, but also provide new service in L1 band.
The L1 navigation band is popular for providing PNT (Position, Navigation and Timing) services for civilian users and for interoperability with other Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS) such as GPS (US), Glonass (Russia), Galileo (EU) and BeiDou (China).
ISRO sources said equipping new satellites with L1 band was crucial for penetration into the civilian sector easily.
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newslime · 1 year
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GSLV-F12 carrying navigation satellite NVS-01 lifts-off from Sriharikota
The satellite comes with 12 years operational life. It provides new service in L1 band and encompasses indigenously developed Rubidium atomic clock.
Tumblr media
SRIHARIKOTA: The Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) on Monday successfully launched NVS-01, a second-generation navigation satellite, from Satish Dhawan Space Centre, SHAR in Sriharikota.
The national space agency is expanding its regional satellite navigation system - NavIC - with the addition of more powerful and reliable navigation satellites. The first satellite in the new series was launched using a GSLV-F12 rocket. Officials said four more are under production.
These satellites are built with a more operational life of 12 years and incorporate L1 band signals additionally. For the first time, an indigenous atomic clock was flown in NVS-01.
The launch vehicle standing 51.7 metres tall with a mass of 420 tonnes has lifted-off majestically from the second launch pad carrying 2,232 kg payload. The satellite was precisely injected into Geosynchronous Transfer Orbit in about 19 minutes.
ISRO chairman S Somanath declared the mission a success and said the satellite team has taken over to do the subsequent orbit raising maneuvers and to put the satellite into the intended orbit.
The NavIC uses seven satellites to provide real-time positioning and timing services in India and an area extending up to 1,500 km from the country's borders. However, several satellites that were launched between 2013-2018 have become defunct, thereby hampering its operational capabilities.
According to ISRO, the second-generation navigation satellites will not only ensure continuity of legacy NavIC services, but also provide new service in L1 band.
The L1 navigation band is popular for providing PNT (Position, Navigation and Timing) services for civilian users and for interoperability with other Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS) such as GPS (US), Glonass (Russia), Galileo (EU) and BeiDou (China).
ISRO sources said equipping new satellites with L1 band was crucial for penetration into the civilian sector easily.
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attud-com · 1 year
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flash-fresh · 2 years
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ISRO Launches Oceansat, 8 Other Satellites.
Scientists of the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) commenced the countdown on Friday for the launch of Earth Observation Satellite - Oceansat - and eight other customer satellites on a PSLV-C54 rocket from the spaceport of Sriharikota on Saturday.
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The 25.30-hour countdown for the 56th flight of the Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV), in its extended version (PSLV-XL), started at 10:26 am today for the lift-off scheduled at 11:56 am on Saturday from the first launchpad at the Satish Dhawan Space Centre, Sriharikota, 115 km from Chennai.
The primary payload of the rocket is an Oceansat which would be separated in orbit-1 while the eight other nano-satellites would be placed in different orbits based on the customer requirements (in the Sun-synchronous polar orbits).
Including the primary payload, nine satellites would ride piggy-back on the 44.4-metre high PSLV-C54 which has a lift-off mass of 321 tonne. It is also the 24th flight of the PSLV-XL version.
The mission would be one of the longest ones undertaken by the ISRO scientists who would engage the rocket to change orbits using two-orbit change thrusters (OCTs) used in the PSLV-C54 launch vehicle. The separation of the Earth Observation Satellite is expected to take place in orbit-1 while the passenger payloads would be separated in Orbit-2.Read more on..
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competitionpedia · 6 months
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Why is ISRO building a second rocket launchport in Tamil Nadu’s Kulasekarapattinam?
The cornerstone for ISRO's second rocket launchpad was laid on February 28 in Kulasekarapattinam, situated in the Thoothukudi district of coastal Tamil Nadu. It will be dedicated solely to commercial, on-demand, and small satellite launches in the future. To know more about Rocket Launch Port in Tamil Nadu, visit: https://competitionpedia.in/…/news-current…/07-03-2024
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techfeeddata · 2 years
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ISRO's heaviest rocket GSLV MK3 will take off on its first ever commercial mission on October 23
ISRO’s heaviest rocket GSLV MK3 will take off on its first ever commercial mission on October 23
The Indian Space Agency has announced that it will have less than an hour’s launch for the first-ever commercial flight of the GSLV Mk3 rocket, which is India’s heaviest launch vehicle. The Indian Space Research Organization said the launch will take place in the night hours of Sunday, October 23 at 00:07 hours or seven minutes past midnight. ISRO will carry out this launch as part of a contract…
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xpertnewsofficial · 2 years
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GSLV-Mk3: The country's heaviest rocket carrying 36 satellites of Britain will fly on October 22, will take off from Sriharikota #latest_news #today #India #viral #newspaper #Britain #Sriharikota #news
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mrwrightroyal · 1 year
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🌌Veeramuthuvel| Project Director |moon landing mission |Chandrayaan 3
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studyxpress · 2 years
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Vikram S Rocket launch LIVE from Sriharikota | UPSC & WBCS Current Affai...
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mindblowingscience · 1 year
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India is gearing up for its first-ever mission to study the sun, expected to launch in early September. The observatory, called Aditya-L1 ("Aditya" means "sun" in Sanskrit), has arrived at its launch site on the island of Sriharikota, on India's east coast.  The Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO), India's national space agency operating this mission, shared the first pictures of the spacecraft on X (formerly known as Twitter) on Aug. 13. While the sun has been studied for a long time, scientists are still puzzled by how its outermost atmospheric layer, known as the corona, gets so hot — about 1.8 million degrees Fahrenheit (1 million degrees Celsius) hotter than the sun's surface. Researchers know little about what exactly unfolds on the sun before it unleashes solar flares and huge plasma clouds called coronal mass ejections (CMEs) into space — and at times toward Earth — and how CMEs accelerate to tremendous speeds close to the sun's disk. Scientists are hoping the Aditya-L1 observatory will provide some clues into these decades-long mysteries.
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