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'India losing satellites due to failure of imported components'

Even as Indian space scientists are working on the partial restoration of communications satellite INSAT-4B, they are worried because of the recurring failure of their satellites due to power supply glitches. The reason may be the failure of imported components, according to Indian Space Research Organisation
(ISRO) scientists.

ISRO has lost two of its satellites earlier -- Chandrayaan in 2009 and INSAT-2D in 1997 -- and INSAT-4B partially now.

A big setback to the space agency, which is trying to get a foothold in the global communications satellite building market is the failure of the W2M satellite co-built by ISRO and EADS Astrium for Eutelsat Communications in January.

"It seems the culprit is imported components for satellite power systems. The Chandrayaan satellite was lost due to power problems in an imported component. It seems the culprit is the imported components used in supplying power to the satellites," an ISRO official told IANS over phone on condition of anonymity.

The DC to DC converter in the Chandrayaan satellite failed, which in turn heated up other components/equipments and stopped their functioning, ultimately forcing ISRO to junk the mission well ahead of its planned life of two years.

Another ISRO official, on condition of anonymity, said: "The component is imported as its size is small whereas the Indian built one is bigger. In space, every additional gram is important. The problem with INSAT-4B may not be connected to DC to DC converter and it is similar to the problem that afflicted W2M satellite."

The 3.4-tonne W2M, the heaviest built by ISRO, launched by Ariane5 rocket from French Guyana in December 2008, developed a problem in its power supply sub-systems when it was being transferred to its intended orbit from the test orbit and Eutelsat later said the satellite is not available for service.

According to ISRO, the problem with INSAT-4B is a power anomaly in one of the satellite's two solar panels and six Ku-Band and six C-Band transponders were switched off so that there is power for the remaining 12 transponders (six Ku-Band and six C-Band).

ISRO officials said the agency imports the solar cells to make the solar panels that supply power to the satellite.

Queried about ISRO tightening its quality control processes, an official said the agency is now focusing on the component quality.

For ISRO, loss of satellites means loss of revenue opportunities - that is higher than the cost of satellite and the rocket that launched it.

Now eyes are on the successful operation of the to-be launched Hylas communication satellite built by ISRO/EADS Astrium for Britain-based Avanti Communications. Its success is expected to clear any doubts of India's capability in satellite manufacturing.

"We have taken care of the power supply glitches in that," an ISRO official said.

'India losing satellites due to failure of imported components' - Hindustan Times
 
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PSLV rocket launch successful, five satellites put into orbit

India's space agency ISRO on Monday successfully launched its Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV) rocket that slung into orbit five satellites, including the advanced high resolution cartography satellite Cartosat-2B. "I am extremely happy to say PSLV 16 was a successful flight. All the satellites were injected related stories
ISRO touches milestone in foreign payload launches
," Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) Chairman K. Radhakrishnan said.

ISRO's 230 tonne PSLV - standing 44 metres tall - soared towards the heavens from the spaceport here, about 80 km north of Chennai. The five satellites together weigh 819 kg.

Apart from its main cargo - the Cartosat-2B weighing 694 kg - the other satellites that the rocket put into orbit are the Algerian remote sensing satellite Alsat-2A (116 kg), two nano satellites (NLS 6.1 AISSAT-1 weighing 6.5 kg built by the University of Toronto, Canada and one kg NLS 6.2 TISAT built by University of Applied Sciences, Switzerland) and STUDSAT, a pico satellite weighing less than one kg, built jointly by students of seven engineering colleges in Andhra Pradesh and Karnataka.

Twenty minutes after blast off, the rocket first released Cartosat-2B followed by Alsat-2A and the three small satellites. Canada and Switzerland, and a pico (very small) satellite Studsat built by seven engineering students of Andhra Pradesh and Karnataka.
 
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'India losing satellites due to failure of imported components'

Even as Indian space scientists are working on the partial restoration of communications satellite INSAT-4B, they are worried because of the recurring failure of their satellites due to power supply glitches. The reason may be the failure of imported components, according to Indian Space Research Organisation
(ISRO) scientists.

ISRO has lost two of its satellites earlier -- Chandrayaan in 2009 and INSAT-2D in 1997 -- and INSAT-4B partially now.

A big setback to the space agency, which is trying to get a foothold in the global communications satellite building market is the failure of the W2M satellite co-built by ISRO and EADS Astrium for Eutelsat Communications in January.

"It seems the culprit is imported components for satellite power systems. The Chandrayaan satellite was lost due to power problems in an imported component. It seems the culprit is the imported components used in supplying power to the satellites," an ISRO official told IANS over phone on condition of anonymity.

The DC to DC converter in the Chandrayaan satellite failed, which in turn heated up other components/equipments and stopped their functioning, ultimately forcing ISRO to junk the mission well ahead of its planned life of two .

'India losing satellites due to failure of imported components' - Hindustan Times

The problem is usa's ban on ISRO to acquire high-end tech.


But the problem is soon solved in obama visit when he sign free trade of high tech product
 
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Havent seen any pakistani friend congratulate India about the recent successful launch of 5 satellites on PSLV. I assume that pakistani members must not be liking/visiting "Indian space capabilities" section. Plus in order to avoid clogging of the sticky thread with same news again and again for many pages. So started this new thread.
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Sriharikota (AP), July 12, (PTI):

In a textbook launch, India's Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV) was on Monday successfully placed into orbit remote sensing satellite Cartosat-2B and four other satellites after a perfect lift off from the spaceport here.


At the end of an over 51-hour countdown, the 44.4 metre-tall four-stage PSLV-C-15, costing Rs 260 crore, blasted off from a launch pad at the Satish Dhawan Space Centre with ignition of the core first stage and placed the satellites in orbit one after the other.

Visibly relieved scientists, headed by ISRO chairman Dr K Radhakrishnan, cheered as ISRO's workhorse PSLV soared into clear skies at 9.22 AM from the spaceport in the East Coast in Andhra Pradesh, about 100 km north of Chennai.

The PSLV launch assumes significance as it comes about three months after ISRO suffered a major setback on April 15 when the Geosynchronous Satellite Launch Vehicle (GSLV-D3), which was launched using an Indian-designed and built cryogenic engine for the first time, failed and fell into the Bay of Bengal.

Cartosat-2B is an advanced remote sensing satellite built by ISRO. This is the latest in the Indian remote sensing satellite series and the 17th in this series.

Cartosat-2B is mainly intended to augment remote sensing data services to the users of multiple spot scene imagery with 0.8 metre spatial resolution and 9.6 km swath in the panchromatic.

Cartosat-2 and 2A, two Indian remote sensing satellites in orbit, are currently providing such services.

A set of four satellites including Studsat built by students of seven engineering colleges in Andhra Pradesh and Karnataka, Alsat from Algeria, two nano satellites from Canada and Switzerland, and a pico (very small) satellite called Oceansat 2 accompanied Cartosat 2 on its trip to orbit.

Planning Commission Vice-Chairman Montek Singh Ahuluwalia, and former ISRO chief Dr K Kasturirangan witnessed the launch.

"It has been a wonderful experience. The ISRO has made the country proud," Ahluwalia said, congratulating the scientists after the perfect take off.

Cartosat-2B carries a panchromatic camera similar to that of its predecessors - Cartosat-2 and 2A and was capable of imaging a swath (geographical strip of land) of 9.6 km with a resolution of 0.8 metre.

The multiple spot scene imagery sent by Cartosat-2B camera would also be useful for village/cadastral level resource assessment and mapping, detailed urban and infrastructure planning and development, transportation system planning, preparation of large-scale cartographic maps, preparation of micro watershed development plans and monitoring of development works of village.

Alsat from Algeria, weighing 116 kg, is also a remote sensing satellite. The two nano satellites, NLS 6.1 and NLS 6.2, weigh six kg and one kg each. Studsat weighs less than one kg.

Besides launching 17 Indian satellites, PSLV has also launched 22 foreign satellites during 1994-2009 into polar sun synchronous, geosynchronous transfer, highly elliptical and low earth orbits and has repeatedly proved its reliability and versatility.

One important modification compared to the previous flights of PSLV is the use of dual launch adopter to carry two large satellites, ISRO sources said.

Soon after injection into the orbit and separation from the PSLV C-15 fourth stage, the two solar panels of Cartosat 2B will be automtically deployed, they said.

Attributing the success of PSLV C-15 to the entire team behind the mission, ISRO chairman K Radhakrishnan said, "We had an excellent flight. It injected precisely the five satellites. The entire ISRO team is behind the success".
 
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Havent seen any pakistani friend congratulate India about the recent successful launch of 5 satellites on PSLV. I assume that pakistani members must not be liking/visiting "Indian space capabilities" section.
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Now why would we need that :) ..you are happy , all of us are happy ...thats all that matters ...
 
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I dont get that. I have already mentioned the intention.

The stick thread must be kept for updates in Indian space capabilities. I wish to avoid like 8-9 pages in the sticky thread just posting same news, congratulations, etc for the same event ie this launch.
 
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PSLV C-15 Grand Success !! - Operation Live From SHAAR

 
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Good work by ISRO !! Most important thing that it was the commercial launch and was executed by perfection. The Algerian sattelite was having US components in it and now because India signed the space coopration with US during Hilary Clinton's visit to India, we have much more open commercial market fo providing launches.

The maximum range PSLV attained in this mission is around 6000 km and altitude of 646 km (at 22.23 min in video) . It is awsome in sense that India can have a true ICBM whenever it needed. Good day for India.
:cheers::cheers:
 
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Some snaps of launch:

pslvc15-01.jpg


pslvc15-02.jpg


pslvc15-03.jpg


pslvc15-04.jpg


pslvc15-05.jpg


pslvc15-06.jpg



:smitten:
 
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