GSLV-D5 countdown begins- Indian space science at
threshold of a new age
1> Indian space science is waiting at
the threshold of a new phase of mega satellite launches and exploration as the
countdown for the GSLV-D5 rocket launch began at 11.50am on Sunday.
2>Twenty-nine hours later, at 4.50pm on 19
August 2013 (Monday), the rocket carrying telecommunication satellite GSAT-14
will lift off from Sriharikota, 100km north of Chennai.
3>GSAT-14 weighs 1,982kg, will be used
for telecast and telecommunication.
4>What makes the launch crucial for the
nation?- Use of an indigenous cryogenic engine as the upper stage. The first
attempt to use an indigenous cryogenic engine on April 15, 2010 to power
GSLV-D3 was a failure. With only one more Russian cryogenic engine left in the
Isro arsenal, success of the indigenous technology using oxygen and hydrogen in
extreme low temperatures as the fuel will propel several big ticket future
missions including a manned project to space.
5> ISRO senior scientists led by
chairman K Radhakrishnan are monitoring GSLV-D5, whose strap-boosters started
getting fuelled soon after the countdown.
6>Liquid propellants are being
filled into the second stage. Liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen, which fuel the
cryogenic engine will be filled around 9am on Monday. Scientists at the Satish
Dhawan Space Centre told reporters that the rocket's health and weather
conditions were fine.
7>India needs cryogenic engines to
launch GSLVs that can carry payloads weighing more than three tonnes, which
hold the key to future of telecommunication and space exploration. GSLV-D5
weighs 414 tonnes.
8> Since 1994, India has had 23
consecutive successes with the Polar Sateliite Launch Vehicles (PSLVs), an
improvised version of which was used for Chandrayaan-1 in August 2009.
9>However, PSLVs can carry only payloads
weighing up to 1.5 tonnes to a geosynchronous transfer orbit (a highly
elliptical orbit with the nearest point to earch about 200km and the farthest
42,00km) , and up to 3.5 tonnes to a low earth orbit of about 200km from earth.
10>GSLV can carry payloads weighing 2.5
tonnes to a geosynchronous transfer orbit, and up to 5 tonnes to a low earth
orbit.
This post is great. Thank you for this post. I like this kind of people who share their knowledge with others.
ReplyDelete