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Indian Space Capabilities

India's cryogenic engine comes of age.

India’s growing prowess in space technology is a nearly invisible, softly-softly adventure of notching up small, incremental successes on a continual basis. Yesterday the Prime Minister announced in the Parliament : “we have been able to successfully develop the cyrogenic engine on our own”. Behind that terse statement lies a trail thick with geo political intrigue, complex sciences and quiet Indians at their tasks.
India’s cryogenic engine initiative began in 1993 but when it carried out its nuclear tests in 1998, it also blew a big hole through its network of international relations in diplomacy and trade. Amidst world-wide condemnation India’s scientists were tarred with suspicion and most collaborations with them were severed.
The real reason for withholding cryogenic engine technology was however not ‘global security’ but commerce—big commerce. These engines are required to launch the geo-synchronous satellites that are used in communications. It’s a lucrative business. Russia, Europe and the US have carved out the launch market. Emergence of India as a low cost launcher would have threatened their shares.
Faced with the ostracisation, India chose to develop the engine on its own. It’s GSLV launch programme was kept on course with the essential cryogenic engines sourced from Russia. In all ten were contracted for. On April 18,2001 India bustled into the exclusive GSLV launchers’ club. It successfully launched a 1.5 tonne satellite and parked it at 36,000 km above, in lock-step with earth’s rotation. That was with a Russian engine.
At Mahendragiri in Tamil Nadu, is the Liquid Propulsion System Centre [LPSC]. Here work on developing India’s own cryo engines has been quietly moving. The system involves materials working at 250 deg below zero and pumps at speeds of 40,000 rpm. There are also complex metering, monitoring, integrating technologies involved. The engines are required to fire for about 700 seconds during the final stage of a launch providing 7 tonnes of thrust.
First signs of success came on Feb 10,2002 when India ‘test-fired’ it’s home-spun engine for the first time. It ran for a few seconds. Eight months later, on Sep 14,2002 the engine had been run for 1000 seconds on the test bed. This confirmed that the Indian design was sound . And then --March 12,2003-- came the news that the engine is ready for manufacture.
Only the US, Russia, China, France and Japan have had this technology so far. The next piece of news you may expect to hear is that India has switched to its own engines to power its GSLV launches. The first of such a series is slated for next year. In ten years flat, India would have internalised and commercialised an advanced technology.
 
The triumph of Indian space research.​

30 year-old ISRO has been bred well by Vikram Sarabhai and Satish Dhawan.

Heard of Antrix Corporation? No, it is not some NASDAQ listed high-tech darling in the US. It is the commercial arm of ISRO [Indian Space Research Organisation] that is racing France and USA to the market for images obtained from space. And with constantly improving quality of its images, Antrix is closing in. Antrix is the new kid on the block let loose by ISRO, itself just 30 years old. ISRO's achievements are something Indians should be proud of. Regrettably however, ISRO is an occasionally noticed, inadequately celebrated silent engine of daring and change.

A recent occasion when ISRO got some mindshare of media-programmed Indians, was in October,2001. On a fine, cool day India's space work horse, the PSLV C3 lifted off and soared into space. Then it performed a copy book launch placing India's TES and two paying customers' satellites, Belgium's PROBA and Germany's BIRD.

The world sat up and took notice. For several reasons. One, the Polar Satellitle Launch Vehicle [PSLV] confirmed its reliability with this second successive perfect launch. Two, the Technology Experiment Satellite [TES] designed and built by India was sending many messages between its stream quality images. Read together the messages amount to this: At over a tonne TES is a state of the art eye in the sky. Its cameras with a resolution of 1 metre can pick an umbrella from up there. Just a few months before, the US had denied India access to the 1m images of Afghanistan from its Ikonos satellite. TES was now in effect saying, 'Never mind - we can manage quite well, thank you' [Incidentally India too will not share TES images: they are for defence purposes only]. Finally to reason three and the implication of TES's imaging technology: until now, Indian cameras were panned. For high resolutions, cameras need to be fixed. In order to give enough time for light to reach the lens, the moving satellite with its camera has to constantly be pivoting on its axis, its stare fixed on its target with the utmost precision. Indian scientists have with the TES, demonstrated this control.

Founding fathers:

For all its contemporary skills, ISRO is a young colt. It was only in 1972 that it was formed. Its pluck is due to the kind of Indians who came to steer it.

Indians like Dr. Vikram Ambalal Sarabhai. A scion of a wealthy family, he could have been a lotus eater all his life. Instead, he was a man devoted to science, the arts and institution building. Born in 1919, Sarabhai obtained his Tripos in Natural Sciences from St.John's College, Cambridge when he was but 20. Then he worked on cosmic rays, under Sir C V Raman at the Indian Institute of Science [IISc], Bangalore. In 1947, he had founded the Physical Research Laboratory at Ahmedabad. PRL turned out to be the seed bed for ISRO. Between 1962 and 1972, Sarabhai was in the inner rooms of Indian decision making, giving shape to his vision. ISRO was no megalomaniac's dream. It was to be instead, a platform --in Sarabhai's words-- "for the application of advanced technologies to the real problems of man and society".

The vociferous consensus of the Indian scientific community is that ISRO's success was assured the day Dr. Satish Dhawan was chosen to head it. Whose inspired decision it was, we will never know but it is one of those that have made India.

Satish Dhawan merits some of our time. He was born in 1920, in Srinagar, Kashmir and studied in Lahore. There he gathered an odd bouquet of degrees: a BA in Mathematics and Physics, an MA in English literature and a BE in Mechanical Engineering. More were to come. An MS in Aeronautical Engineering from the University of Minnesota, USA and a PhD from Caltech. At the end of these labours he was barely 27! Add now, his dash and killer good looks, a propensity to take all the blame and share all the honours and a passionate commitment to India and you have a hero. [Read tributes to Satish Dhawan by Roddam Narasimha and Dr.Amulya K N Reddy. ]

Ponder Sarabhai and Dhawan and you would want to ask with a longing : "Where have all such men gone, my India?"

Raising rocketry:

Dhawan was at heart a teacher. When asked to head the ISRO in 1972, he had been at the IISc for close to 20 years. He accepted the new job only on condition that he would continue as Director of IISc. The born mentor then set out to build people who would build India's rockets. Abdul Kalam, Roddam Narasimha, U V Rao and K Kasturirangan are but a few of the people who were burnished by Dhawan's hands.

After spending the early years getting scientists, engineers, vendors and fabrication facilities together, ISRO was ready with its own Apple satellite by 1981. This was a learning exercise and it was launched by the European Space Agency. From that point on, progress has been steady and on two fronts. On the one, India began to design two kinds of satellites: a series -the INSAT- for communications and another -the IRS- for remote sensing. On the other, satellite launching vehicles have been evolving in sophistication and ability. India progressed from solid propelled to liquid propelled rockets. It is now developed cryogenic engines for rockets -the GSLV- that can launch geo-synchronous satellites for communications. It now stands tall, independent and 100% self sufficient in designing, manufacturing and launching satellites.

Of course, India's space adventure has had its share of failures, waste and dependance - but increasingly these years, a series of stunning successes. [Click to browse ISRO]. ISRO is a vast organism today spread all over India. It has dedicated facilities for research, design, fabrication, management and marketing for its many abilities: liquid and cryogenic propulsion, satellites, inertial systems, telemetry, space imaging, control systems and of course launch services.

Marketing quality:

Let us revisit Antrix: It markets $40 million worth of images from ISRO's five satellites. Amongst its clientele are the European Commission [for agriculture and forestry], Japan [volcanic activity], USA [telephone network mapping, rail alignments, Wal-Mart, airlines] and Thailand [information]. Its images are distributed by Space Imaging Inc and Euromap. Along the way the quality of ISRO's 1 metre resolution images has set back the esteem for those from USA's SPOT and Landsat satellites. The upshot of this situation was that USA --the free-market evangelist --, actually resorted to a price war. It dropped prices from 15 cents to 2 cents a sq. kM! Antrix stood firm at 80 cents and banked on its quality. Well, its business is growing. And to pile on more misery, ISRO will soon offer 0.3 metre resolution. [Source: 'Outlook', Jan 14,2002]

Quite apart from the hush-hush images for security from its sixth --and the latest-- satellite ISRO's contribution to India's socio-economic development has been immense. It has modernised India's work with weather, forestry, flood control, agriculture, mining, oil prospecting, archeology, mapping, education, health care, communications, transport, water resources, oceanography, disaster management, .... its a long list. Sarabhai's vision has been realised.

ISRO has always been manned by self-effacing, highly qualified and skilled men and women - 32000 of them currently. Many of them have come from small towns with only brilliant minds as their capital. Small, bespectacled and commonplace men you'd pass on the street without noticing. Here they are flailing their arms and giving vent to a brief burst of emotion on achieving another success for India. They get a lot of time on television when they fail; today they will get 10 seconds. It is they who are writing India's name in space. Men who will retire with small pensions. Men who venerate Sarabhai and Dhawan.
 
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It is already on the moon.

A flag will not wave on the moon since there is no wind on the moon. However the Moon Impact Probe did create mechanical waves on the moon surface on impact.

Actually It was "Painted" on the MIP, so technically after the impact the Flag would NOT have existed.

I was looking for a day when we can see indian astronauts being seen on the Moon surface we have solved Three puzzles ..

1. Re Entry
2. Path to Moon
3. Reaching Moon Surface

Its an excellent beginning.. in a limited budget.
 
More spy satellites.

Where the hell is RAW they should be drooling at the chance to get these sats.

We take enough photos of the borders and outlying areas we may actually find Who is supporting the rebels.
 
Actually It was "Painted" on the MIP, so technically after the impact the Flag would NOT have existed.

I was looking for a day when we can see indian astronauts being seen on the Moon surface we have solved Three puzzles ..

1. Re Entry
2. Path to Moon
3. Reaching Moon Surface

Its an excellent beginning.. in a limited budget.


we have to solve more things than that.

We need to get some one into space first.

we need to make a applicable spacecraft.

We need to be able to perform a EVA

We need to be able to dock Spacecraft in Space.

we need to be able to send something to the moons orbit and then bring it back.

And we need reentry vessles which we don't have.
 
ESA Portal - Hylas payload shipped to India

Hylas payload shipped to India


6 November 2009
Hylas, a flexible, broadband Ka-band satellite, is steadily moving towards completion. The communications payload has been shipped from England to India for integration with the platform, marking a key milestone for the project.

This important step was completed in late October by Astrium UK, the prime contractor for the Hylas satellite, supported by Avanti Communications, the satellite customer and operator, and ESA, partner and co-funder of the project. The next phase involves the integration of payload and platform systems and the execution of the satellite-level test programme, prior to launch in 2010.

The Hylas mission will address the large demand for broadband services in Europe that cannot be met by terrestrial networks. It will provide capacity to serve hundreds of thousands of Internet users, and broadcast up to 30 standard-quality or 15 high-definition TV channels in Ku-band.

Astrium is leading the design and manufacture of Hylas and is responsible for developing the advanced Ku- and Ka-band payload. The Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO), in Bangalore, India, is providing the satellite platform. The communications payload and the platform will be integrated and tested in Bangalore, in preparation for the launch by Arianespace in 2010. Other European and Canadian companies, including TESAT, ComDev and CASA Espacio, are providing essential equipment for the payload.

“The Generic Flexible Payload technology, developed by Astrium, is at the heart of the communications module,” explains Andrew Murrell, Hylas Payload Engineer for ESA. “It is based on highly integrated equipment that provides in-orbit flexibility to adapt the satellite’s frequency plan and connectivity to match evolving market demands. The use of the newly developed, flexible travelling wave tube amplifier from TESAT enables further optimisation of satellite resources by allowing power to be reallocated between service regions according to changing needs.”

While broadband services for domestic and business customers form the core application for Hylas, the system has been designed to support the provision of other communications applications such as HDTV broadcasting and data contribution and distribution services.

A contract was signed between ESA and Avanti for the development of Hylas in 2006, providing support for the development of the most innovative elements of this new system. The satellite is designed to have a lifetime of 15 years, and will be positioned in geostationary orbit at 33.5°W.
 
we have to solve more things than that.

We need to get some one into space first.

we need to make a applicable spacecraft.

We need to be able to perform a EVA

We need to be able to dock Spacecraft in Space.

we need to be able to send something to the moons orbit and then bring it back.


And we need reentry vessles which we don't have.

Yes, Agreed.
Thats why i said its a Good "Beginning"
 
Chandrayaan-2 to be complete by 2012-13: Annadurai

Chandrayaan-2 moon mission, which will help in analysis of mineral composition and undertake terrain mapping of the moon, will be completed by 2012-13, Project Director of Chandrayaan, M. Annadurai said today.

“The Rs. 425 crore project will be completed by 2012-13. As opposed to Chandrayaan-1 which was a moon orbiter, in Chandrayaan-2, the two moon rovers will actually land on the moon surface,” he said inaugurating the sixth National Student Conference at University Visveswaraya College of Engineering.

“Chadrayaan-2 will consist of the spacecraft and a landing platform with two moon rovers, one from India and one from Russia, which will land on the moon and move on wheels on the lunar surface, pick up samples of soil or rocks, do a chemical analysis and send the data to the spacecraft orbiting above,” Mr. Annadurai said.

Mr. Annadurai, the Project Director of Chandrayaan-1 and 2, said Chardrayaan-1 which was the 70th satellite to go on the moon “created history with discovery of water there”.

“The Rs. 386 crore project (Chandrayaan-1) which took four and a half years to be completed has provided 6 terabits of data which will take the scientists three years to mull over,” he said.

The Hindu : Sci-Tech : Chandrayaan-2 to be complete by 2012-13: Annadurai
 
Hylas payload shipped to India

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Hylas payload

Hylas, a flexible, broadband Ka-band satellite, is steadily moving towards completion. The communications payload has been shipped from England to India for integration with the platform, marking a key milestone for the project.

This important step was completed in late October by Astrium UK, the prime contractor for the Hylas satellite, supported by Avanti Communications, the satellite customer and operator, and ESA, partner and co-funder of the project. The next phase involves the integration of payload and platform systems and the execution of the satellite-level test programme, prior to launch in 2010.

The Hylas mission will address the large demand for broadband services in Europe that cannot be met by terrestrial networks. It will provide capacity to serve hundreds of thousands of Internet users, and broadcast up to 30 standard-quality or 15 high-definition TV channels in Ku-band.

Astrium is leading the design and manufacture of Hylas and is responsible for developing the advanced Ku- and Ka-band payload. The Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO), in Bangalore, India, is providing the satellite platform. The communications payload and the platform will be integrated and tested in Bangalore, in preparation for the launch by Arianespace in 2010. Other European and Canadian companies, including TESAT, ComDev and CASA Espacio, are providing essential equipment for the payload.

“The Generic Flexible Payload technology, developed by Astrium, is at the heart of the communications module,” explains Andrew Murrell, Hylas Payload Engineer for ESA. “It is based on highly integrated equipment that provides in-orbit flexibility to adapt the satellite’s frequency plan and connectivity to match evolving market demands. The use of the newly developed, flexible travelling wave tube amplifier from TESAT enables further optimisation of satellite resources by allowing power to be reallocated between service regions according to changing needs.”

While broadband services for domestic and business customers form the core application for Hylas, the system has been designed to support the provision of other communications applications such as HDTV broadcasting and data contribution and distribution services.

A contract was signed between ESA and Avanti for the development of Hylas in 2006, providing support for the development of the most innovative elements of this new system. The satellite is designed to have a lifetime of 15 years, and will be positioned in geostationary orbit at 33.5°W.
 
Isro finds little moon magnets

November 14th, 2009
By Our Correspondent

Bengaluru, Nov. 13: Indian mooncraft Chandrayaan-I discovered a new facet of the earth’s nearest astral neighbour: Scores of miniature magnetic bubbles that fend off harmful solar winds and cosmic radiation.

The latest findings could lead to the creation of protective shields for human colonies proposed on the lunar surface, says Dr Anil Bhardwaj, head, Planetary Science Branch at Isro’s Vikram Sarabhai Space Centre (VSSC), Thiruvananthapuram.

Dr Bhardwaj said the mini-magnetic fields were spotted by Sub-keV Atom Reflecting Analyser (Sara), an instrument built jointly by scientific groups from Sweden, India, Japan, and Switzerland.

“We found the first one on the far side and this has confirmed what was theoretically suggested about ten years ago,” he said at the Platinum Jubilee meeting of Indian Academy of Sciences on Friday.

He said the findings — of bubbles deflecting solar winds that collide with celestial bodies in the solar system — will be used by scientists and engineers readying European Space Agency (ESA)’s Bepi-Colombo mission to Mercury.

The new findings come a month after Nasa scientists announced that Chandrayaan found water on the lunar surface.

Isro finds little moon magnets | Deccan Chronicle
 
Tirupati, Nov 14


Tirupati, Nov 14: The Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO) chief K. Radhakrishnan said here on Saturday that India is developing the Geosynchronous Satellite Launch Vehicle Mark III (GSLV Mk III) to enhance the capability of the country to be a competitive player in the multimillion dollar commercial launch market.


Addressing the Andhra Pradesh Science Congress here, Radhakrishnan said: "We are working on a new launch vehicle development GSLV Mark III which is expected to be flying in the coming years. And a major milestone in the development is going to be the static testing of the systems."

"We could realize the world's third largest propellant boosters H200 with 200 tonnes of propellants mixed in India, in a plant which is mostly automatic, which is situated in Shreeharikota with our own technology, with the ingredients coming from the Indian Industry based on our technology," he added.

GSLV Mk III is conceived and designed to make ISRO fully self reliant in launching heavier communication satellites of INSAT-4 class, which weighs 4500 to 5000 kilograms.

The vehicle envisages multi-mission launch capability for GTO, LEO, Polar and intermediate circular orbits.

In his address Radhakrishnan also noted that ISRO is giving stress for the development of miniature satellite system involving Indian Universities.

"Today our universities are enabled to make satellites of 1kilogram and 6 kilograms class. This is one of our major thrust for the future," he said.

In August, students of the Indian Institute of Technology, (IIT) Kanpur had developed a Nano satellite, 'Jugnu' under the guidance of ISRO.

The satellite weighs less than three kilograms and consists of advanced functionalities that other normal satellites have. The payload of satellite would include a camera, designed with complete indigenous technologies, in the purpose of near remote sensing.

There would be a GPS receiver and finally the satellite will transmit blinking signal while making the rounds over the earth.

The Nano satellite is scheduled to be launched by the ISRO in December.
 
BBC NEWS | South Asia | No India launch of Iran satellite

India says it has no plans to launch an Iranian satellite, a move which would have angered the United States.

"We received a letter from the Iranians to launch a satellite for them some months ago. We don't plan to give them a response," top Indian officials said.

Any such launch would be a sensitive issue given that Western nations view with concern Iran's missile programme.

The remarks from Delhi came as Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki wound up a two-day visit to India.

Iran launched its first domestically-made satellite into orbit in February, insisting its intentions were peaceful. Western governments voiced concerns the technology used could lead to ballistic missile development.


Little progress seems to have been made on... bringing a gas pipeline from Iran through Pakistan into India

Any assistance by India in launching Iranian satellites could raise American concerns - the Bush administration, for instance, was dead set against an Iran-Pakistan-India gas pipeline.

India is also more than aware that Iran's nuclear programme is the subject of great international controversy
 
NASA signs agreement with ISRO for use of Indian satellite

U.S. space agency NASA has signed an agreement with Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) to use data from Indian satellite Oceansat—2, for various American agencies for research activities, including weather forecasting.

Launched on September 23, 2009 using the Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle from Sriharikota, Oceansat-2; is designed to provide service continuity for operational users of the Ocean Colour Monitor (OCM) instrument on Oceansat-1.

The agreement with the ISRO will lead to the use of data from Oceansat-2 for various U.S. agencies for research, education and other activities of public good including weather forecasting.

The Letter of Intent in this regard was signed by Michael H Freilich, Director Earth Science Division, National Aeronautics and Space Administration; Mary E Kicza Assistant Administrator for Satellite and Information Science of the Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration; and R.R. Navalgund, Director, Space Application Centre, ISRO.

The signing ceremony was done in Washington on the sidelines of Sixth Plenary Session of the Group on Earth Observations (GEO).

The Deputy Chief of Mission, Indian Embassy, Arun K Singh; and Deviprasad Karnik, Counsellor (Space) were also present on the occasion.

The Hindu : Sci-Tech / Science : NASA signs agreement with ISRO for use of Indian satellite

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ISRO is pride of India:cheers:
 
A prayer before the launch of every ISRO satellite​
Staff Correspondent

Scientists visit Dharmasthala as devotees to offer puja for success

MANGALORE: Some scientists at the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) share a special attachment with Sri Kshetra Dharmasthala situated on the foothills of the Western Ghats in Dakshina Kannada. A group of scientists from the Master Control Facility (MCF), Hassan, under the control of ISRO, visit Dharmasthala before the launch of a satellite and offer puja to Lord Manjunathaswamy praying for the successful launch of the satellite. They bring with them a miniature (model) of satellite to be launched. Puja is offered to the model also.

The team of scientists return with prasada leaving the miniature satellite in Dharmasthala. And this tradition has been in practice for the past about 20 years. Every time ISRO launched a satellite either from Sriharikota or Kourou in French Guyana, the miniatures have been brought to Dharmasthala and left there, sources said.

And, how did it all begin? Veerendra Heggade, Dharmadhikari of Sri Kshetra Dharmasthala, told The Hindu on Friday that about 20 years ago a satellite launched by the ISRO developed a snag. "Probably, it was Insat-1B launched in August 1983. After the launch its solar panel did not open. It created tension among scientists and the people," he said.

Following this, a team of scientists from the MCF visited Dharmasthala as devotees and offered prayers. "Since then they visit as devotees and offer prayers. It is a matter of their faith,'' he said.

On Thursday, the ISRO launched Insat-4A, a fourth generation telecommunication satellite. Its miniature had been brought to Dharmasthala a few days ago before its launch.
 
NASA signs agreement with ISRO to use data from Oceasat II​


Washington, Nov 19 (ANI): The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) of the US has entered an agreement with the Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO) to use data from the Indian satellite Oceansat-II.

The agreement will pave the way for NASA to use data from Oceansat-II for its research, education, weather forecasting, and other activities aimed at the public good.

The agreement in this regard was signed by Michael Freilich, Director Earth Science Division, NASA and Ranganath Navalgund, Director, Space Application Centre, on the sidelines of Sixth Plenary Session of the Group on Earth Observations (GEO).

Oceansat-II, which was launched in September, was designed to provide service continuity for operational users of the Ocean Colour Monitor (OCM) instrument.

The satellite contains eight bands of the OCM to study ocean biology, Ku band pencil beam, Scatterometer to measure sea surface wind vectors and radio occultation sounder for atmosphere. (ANI)
 

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