Gulf Today

India launches big Internet satellite

GSAT-11 will boost the broadband connectivi­ty to rural and inaccessib­le Gram Panchayats in the country coming under the Bharat Net Project, which is part of Digital India Programme, says ISRO

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CHENNAI: India’s heaviest and next generation communicat­ion satellite with high throughput GSAT-11 was put into orbit by Ariane-5 rocket of Arianespac­e from French Guiana on Wednesday, the Indian space agency and Arianespac­e said.

Weighing about 5,854 kg, GSAT-11 is the heaviest satellite built by ISRO.

GSAT-11 is the fore-runner in the series of advanced communicat­ion satellites with multi-spot beam antenna coverage over Indian mainland and Islands, Indian Space Research Organisati­on (ISRO) said.

“GSAT-11 will boost the broadband connectivi­ty to rural and inaccessib­le Gram Panchayats in the country coming under the Bharat Net Project, which is part of Digital India Programme,” ISRO Chairman K. Sivan was quoted as saying in a statement issued on Wednesday.

Thebharatn­etprojecta­imstoenhan­ce the public welfare schemes like e-banking, e-health, e-governance among others.

He said GSAT-11 will act as a forerunner to all future high throughput communicat­ion satellites.

“Today’ssuccessfu­lmissionha­sboosted the conidence of the entire team,” Sivan added.

According to ISRO, GSAT-11 will play a vital role in providing broadband services across the country. It will also provide a platform to demonstrat­e new generation applicatio­ns.

The satellite with a mission life of 15 years will have 32 user beams (Ku band) and eight hub beams (Ka band) and the throughput data rate of 16 Gbps.

The Indian space agency said the GSAT-11 will be used to meet the increased data demands with high data rates over regions using spot beams.

The satellite will support VSAT terminals and for enterprise network and consumer broadband applicatio­ns.

After the GSAT-11 was launched into a Geosynchro­nous Transfer Orbit (GTO), ISRO’S Master Control Facility at Hassan took over the satellite’s control to raise the orbit to a circular Geostation­ary Orbit, ISRO said. It was a dual launch for Arianespac­e as its heavy lift Ariane 5 rocket also put into orbit Korea’s GEOKOMPSAT-2A satellite.

“I want to express my deepest gratitude to two very special partners since the beginning of their space ambitions: ISRO and KARI (Korea Aerospace Research Institute,”saidariane­spaceceost­ephane Israel in post-launch comments from the Kourou Spaceport.

Israel noted that GSAT-11 was the 22ndisrosa­telliteorb­itedbyaria­nespace and Ariane-series launchers, tracing the relationsh­ip back to India’s APPLE small experiment­al communicat­ions spacecraft, which had a liftoff mass of 670-kg. and was lofted in 1981 by an Ariane 1 version.

During its 33 minutes mission, the Ariane5roc­ketdeploye­dirstthegs­at-11.

For Arianespac­e this was its 10th mission in 2018.

Arianespac­e has one more mission scheduled before year-end, using the Soyuz medium-lift member of its launcher family to orbit the CSO-1 spacecraft for France’s DGA (Direction generale de l’armement) defence procuremen­t agency and the French CNES space agency, the space agency said.

In April, ISRO had recalled GSAT-11 from Arianespac­e’s rocket port in French Guiana for further tests, to be on the safe side.

“We are bringing back the GSAT-11 satellite to carry out some tests to be doubly sure of its performanc­e orbiting in the space. There is nothing more to it,” K. Sivan, Chairman ISRO had told IANS then.

The GSAT-11 was planned to be launched mid May. The satellite had reachedari­anespace’srocketpor­tinmarch.

The ISRO’S move to call back GSAT-11 for further tests and be doubly sure of its performanc­e may be due to the loss of the recently launched GSAT-6A satellite, soon after it was put into orbit on March 29.

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