Isro launches 3 Singapore satellites onboard PSLV-C53
Hundreds witness launch from view gallery of the Space Theme Park
ISRO successfully launched its PSLVC53/DS-EO Mission, the second dedicated commercial mission of Newspace India Ltd (NSIL), from the second launch pad at Satish Dhawan Space Centre, Sriharikota. on Thursday.
Hundreds of people gathered to witness the launch from the view gallery of the Space Theme Park and cheered in delight as the rocket zoomed into the blue skies.
A four-stage expendable, 44.4m-tall PSLV-C53 with a lift-off mass of about 228 tonne, the total weight of the three satellites is 522.8 kg. It took off majestically with textbook precision at 6.02pm into the Space, leaving a trail of orange flames.
Congratulating Team ISRO for the successful mission, ISRO chairman S. Somanath said, “The PSLV C53 rocket has placed the customer satellites in a precise orbit.”
The rocket will write some ‘POEMS’ in Space, he said while referring to using the spent fourth stage to carry out a set of scientific experiments.
Somanath said the control of PS4 or the fourth and final stage of the rocket will be taken over by its systems after ejection of the three Singapore satellites. The ISRO chief said the PS4 with six payloads will carry
out experiments in Space.
ISRO scientists said PSLV-C53 is designed to orbit DS-EO satellite along with two other copassenger satellites from Singapore. Both DS-EO, a 365kg satellite and NEUSAR, a 155kg satellite, belong to Singapore. The third satellite is a 2.8kg Scoob-1 of Nanyang Technological University (NTU), Singapore.
PSLV-C53 also carried six payloads, including two from Indian Space start-ups Digantara and Dhruva Aerospace in its fourth stage (PS4).
The Indian Space agency has PSLV variants PSLV-DL with two and PSLV-QL with four strap-on motors and PSLV-XL with bigger booster motors.
The choice of the rocket to be used depends on the weight of the satellite and the orbit where the satellite has to be orbited. DS-EO carries an Electro-optic, multispectral payload that will provide full colour images for land classification and serve humanitarian assistance and disaster relief requirements.
NEUSAR is Singapore’s first small commercial satellite carrying a SAR payload, which is capable of providing images day and night and in all weather conditions.
SCOOB-I satellite is the first satellite in the Student Satellite Series (S3-I), a hands-on student training programme from the Satellite Research Centre (SARC) at Singapore’s NTU School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering.