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Indian launch attempt of earth observation satellite fails

GamoAccu

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NEW DELHI (AP) — An Indian rocket failed in its attempt Thursday to put a satellite into orbit to provide real-time images used to monitor cyclones and other potential natural disasters.
A technical fault occurred in the third and final ignition stage shortly after the rocket was launched from the space center in Sriharikota in southern India, the country's space agency said.
The satellite was to be geostationary, meaning it would orbit in sync with the Earth and remain over a fixed position. It would provide images of cloud bursts and thunderstorms and obtain data for agriculture, forestry and marine purposes.

The space agency did not disclose what would happen to the rocket and satellite after the ignition failure.
“Since the third stage has not ignited, it has not attained the velocity which would keep it in orbit. It will fall back to Earth sometime soon. Tracking will tell that later,” said Pallava Bagla, an outside expert.
This was the fourth failure of 14 rocket launches of a geostationary platform since 2001, the Economic Times newspaper said.
India has an ambitious space program with decades of research allowing it to develop satellite, communications and remote sensing technologies that are helping solve everyday problems at home, from forecasting fish migration to predicting storms and floods.
The government has set a deadline of 2022 for India’s first manned spaceflight.
In 2019, India sent a spacecraft to explore water deposits on the far side of the moon but couldn't successfully land the vessel on the lunar surface.


 
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Nice Nice - looks like Diwali has come early this year for Indians..
 
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The ones celebrating must have a satelite launch vehicle of their own right? Because even private Indian startup companies are going to launch their satelite launch vehicles from 2022 onwards.
 
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Come on, you must have a couple of smart guys among 1.4 billion. Even at a rate of 0.01% good scientists/engineers puts the figure at 140,000 brilliant minds. Don't tell me all of them left on H1b.
 
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Posts of No-value/off-topic
Unfortunate the satellite failed

Luckily there was no loss of human life

Failed space launches can disastrous if they fell on populated areas and lead upto 500 or more deaths

The ones celebrating must have a satelite launch vehicle of their own right? Because even private Indian startup companies are going to launch their satelite launch vehicles from 2022 onwards.
They don't, but the nation they cheerleader does
 
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Come on, you must have a couple of smart guys among 1.4 billion. Even at a rate of 0.01% good scientists/engineers puts the figure at 140,000 brilliant minds. Don't tell me all of them left on H1b.
That is the case for every country. Not everyone can be a Rocket Scientist. In the case of BD, they probably don't have the 0.01% of "good scientist/engineers" or at least we haven't seen any evidence that would lead us to believe smart people exist in BD -- particularly, after reading your reasoning. I hope you are an anomaly that is mis representing a very vibrant S Asian country.
 
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That is the case for every country. Not everyone can be a Rocket Scientist. In the case of BD, they probably don't have the 0.01% of "good scientist/engineers" or at least we haven't seen any evidence that would lead us to believe smart people exist in BD -- particularly, after reading your reasoning. I hope you are an anomaly that is mis representing a very vibrant S Asian country.

Maybe you should like my reasoning, else your rockets and satellites will keep falling apart. It cannot be that hard finding a few good talent in an entire continent. Fix your recruitment process maybe? Or even that won't help?
 
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Maybe you should like my reasoning, else your rockets and satellites will keep falling apart. It cannot be that hard finding a few good talent in an entire continent. Fix your recruitment process maybe? Or even that won't help?
I only like reasoning from people that can walk the talk. The day BD can launch a satellite, you can come back to claim your privileges.
 
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I only like reasoning from people that can walk the talk. The day BD can launch a satellite, you can come back to claim your privileges.

But we're not aiming to be suppapowa 2030-40-50, we can just pay someone to do the launch. Unless we're launching dozens every year and I don't see why we would.
 
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I only like reasoning from people that can walk the talk. The day BD can launch a satellite, you can come back to claim your privileges.
Well to give them credit Bangla space program is more successfully then US, EU, Russian, Chinese, Japanese, Indian and Iranian space programs combined

Considering it never had a single launch failure, something even SpaceX has failed to achieve
 
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Well to give them credit Bangla space program is more successfully then US, EU, Russian, Chinese, Japanese, Indian and Iranian space programs combined

US, EU, Russian, Chinese, Japanese .. you could end the list here and it would still mean the same. Indian wasn't needed.
 
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Well to give them credit Bangla space program is more successfully then US, EU, Russian, Chinese, Japanese, Indian and Iranian space programs combined

Considering it never had a single launch failure, something even SpaceX has failed to achieve

Bangladesh is using their money wisely.

 
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