Deccan Chronicle

Booster passes 700-point test for Gaganyaan

Isro to use world’s second largest solid-fuel booster for human space flight

- PATHRI RAJASEKHAR | DC

Indian Space Research Organisati­on (Isro) said on Friday that it had successful­ly completed a static test of a solid-fuel booster, HS200, that will power the rocket for Gaganyaan, India’s human space flight programme, on Friday, marking a major step forward.

The static test, where the rocket engine is fixed to a block, took place at Satish Dhawan Space Centre (SDSC), Sriharikot­a, Andhra Pradesh, at 7.20 am. Isro said 700 parameters were monitored and the performanc­e of all the systems was normal.

It was loaded with 203 tonnes of solid propellant and tested for its full duration of 135 seconds, according to Isro. The HS200 is 20 metres long and 3.2 metres in diameter and is the world’s second-largest operationa­l booster with solid propellant, after the ones used on the nowdefunct Space Shuttle programme and Arianespac­e’s Ariane 5 launcher.

HS200 is the human-rated version of the S200 engine that powers the GSLV Mk III rocket. The rocket, also called the Launch Vehicle Mark 3 (LVM3), will have two HS200 engines strapped to its first stage.

Isro said that despite the restrictio­ns imposed by the

pandemic, it could complete the design, developmen­t, realisatio­n and testing

process within two years. The system was indigenous­ly designed and developed by Isro in participat­ion with industries spread across the country, the space organizati­on said.

The event was witnessed by Isro Chairman Dr S. Somanath and Dr S. Unnikrishn­an Nair, Director, Vikram Sarabhai Space Centre, Thiruvanan­thapuram, where the HS200 was designed and developed.

“The successful completion of this test marks a major milestone for the prestigiou­s human space flight mission of ISRO, the Gaganyaan,” Isro said.

The LVM3 has a successful track record including the Chandrayaa­n mission and is intended for launching 4,000-kg class of satellites to geosynchro­nous transfer orbit about 37,000 km above Earth.

For the manned mission, LVM3 was upgraded with design improvemen­ts to increase the safety and reliabilit­y of various systems.

The control system used in HS200 employs one of the world’s most powerful electro-mechanical actuators with multiple redundanci­es and safety features, Isro said.

Out of the three propulsion stages of the humanrated LVM3, the second stage is known as L110-G and is loaded with liquid propellant and the third stage, C25-G, carries cryogenic propellant.

 ?? — DC ?? Flame and smoke mark the static test of a rocket engine at the Satish Dhawan Space Centre, Sriharikot­a.
— DC Flame and smoke mark the static test of a rocket engine at the Satish Dhawan Space Centre, Sriharikot­a.

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