Read my post (see below). I addressed all of his nonsense claims with citations.
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Heaviest Indian satellite is only about 690kg. Chinese DFH-4 is 5,000kg.
What's wrong with you?
I've already explained that one Chinese DFH-4 5,000kg (or 10,000 pound) satellite outweighed your lightweight Indian high-school-project satellites by many many times. You cannot compare amateur Indian satellites to professional industrial-strength Chinese satellites.
Also, India didn't discover water on the Moon. That was a NASA detector, not Indian. You were just the mindless taxi service.
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India orbits 10 satellites in single launch | World | RIA Novosti
"India orbits 10 satellites in single launch
12:16 28/04/2008
NEW DELHI, April 28 (RIA Novosti) - India launched on Monday a PSLV-C9 rocket carrying 10 satellites, a record number for the country's space program, national television reported.
The Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO) carried out the launch from the Sriharikota island in the Bay of Bengal.
PSLV-C9, in its thirteenth flight, delivered into polar sun-synchronous orbit two domestic satellites and eight foreign spacecraft, including nanosatellites belonging to Canada, Germany, Denmark, Japan and the Netherlands.
India's 690-kg Cartosat-2A remote sensing satellite carried the latest panchromatic camera that can record images with spatial resolution of around one meter. The satellite can be maneuvered in orbit to facilitate the operation of the camera.
The second Indian spacecraft, an experimental
83-kg Mini Satellite (IMS-1) will be used for testing advanced technology in future launches.
Eight nanosatellites were built by foreign universities and research institutions specifically for the PSLV-C9 launch under a commercial agreement with Antrix Corporation.
They weigh from 3 to 16 kilograms with a total weight of about 50 kg."
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NASA - NASA Radar Finds Ice Deposits at Moon's North Pole
"
Using data from a NASA radar that flew aboard India's Chandrayaan-1 spacecraft,
scientists have detected ice deposits near the moon's north pole."