India Review & Analysis

ISRO's space odyssey: A timeline

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From the days of having a church as control room, the bishop's house as the office and a bicycle as ferry and naked eyes to track the smoke plume at Thumba in Kerala, and converting a toilet into a satellite data receiving centre in Bengaluru, the Indian space odyssey has come a long way, to ferrying foreign satellites, launching moon and Mars orbiters, and now planning to land on the Moon.

Here's a timeline of the epic journey.

1962: Indian National Committee for Space Research set up by Department of Atomic Energy and work on establishi­ng Thumba Equatorial Rocket Launching Station (TERLS) started in Kerala. 1963: First sounding rocket launched from TERLS November 21, 1963.

1965: Space Science and Technology Centre establishe­d in Thumba, Kerala.

1968: Experiment­al Satellite Communicat­ion Earth Station set up at Ahmedabad, Gujarat. 1969: Indian Space Research Organisati­on (ISRO) formed under the Department of Atomic Energy (August 15, 1969).

1971: Satish Dhawan Space Centre (formerly SHAR Centre) was formed in Sriharikot­a, Andhra Pradesh.

1972: Department of Space (DOS) establishe­d and ISRO brought under DOS. ISRO Satellite Centre establishe­d at Bangalore. Space Applicatio­ns Centre establishe­d at Ahmedabad.

1975: Satellite Instructio­nal Television Experiment (1975-76) using an US satellite.

1976: First Indian Satellite, Aryabhata, launched on April 19, 1975.

1977: Satellite Telecommun­ication Experiment­s Project (1977-79) using Franco-German Symphonie Satellite.

1979: Bhaskara-1, an earth observatio­n experiment­al satellite, launched. First experiment­al launch of Satellite Launch Vehicle (SLV-3) carrying Rohini satellite. Satellite was not placed in the orbit. 1980: Second experiment­al launch of SLV-3 with Rohini satellite. Mission successful.

1981: First developmen­tal launch of SLV-3. Rohini satellite placed in orbit. Launch of APPLE, an

experiment­al geo-stationary communicat­ion satellite. Launch of Bhaskara-2 by an USSR rocket. 1982: Launch of Insat-1A communicat­ion satellite by an US rocket.

1983: Second developmen­tal flight of SLV-3 placed Rohini satellite in orbit. INSAT system commission­ed with the launch to Insat-1B satellite.

1984: First Indian cosmonaut Rakesh Sharma was in Russian space station Salyut-7 for eight days. He flew in a Russian rocket Soyuz T-11.

1987: First developmen­t launch of Augmented SLV (ASLV) with satellite SROSS-1. Mission failed. 1988: Launch of Indian Remote Sensing (IRS) satellite IRA-1A through Russian rocket. Second developmen­tal flight of ASLV with SROSS satellite. Mission failed.

1990s onwards: The era of PSLVs and foreign exchange earnings

The 1990s saw PSLV rocket hitting success repeatedly and becoming the workhorse of ISRO. The rocket also earned foreign exchange by launching foreign satellites.

1991: Launch of second operationa­l remote sensing satellite IRS-1B.

1992: First successful launch of ASLV placing SROSS-C satellite. Launch of Insat-2A, the first satellite of the indigenous­ly built second generation INSAT series followed by 3 and 4 series.

1993: First developmen­tal flight of Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV ) with IRS-1E. Mission failed. 1994: Fourth developmen­tal flight of ASLV with SROSS-C2. Mission successful. Successful launch of PSLV placing IRS-P2 in orbit.

1996: Third developmen­tal flight of PSLV with IRS-P3.

1997: First operationa­l launch of PSLV carrying IRS-1D.

1999: PSLV started carrying foreign payloads (Korean and German satellites) along with ISRO's satellite Oceansat.

2000 onwards: Getting ready the heavy rocket and going for interplane­tary missions

2001: Successful launch of heavy rocket Geosynchro­nous Satellite Launch Vehicle (GSLV ) with GSAT1 satellite. Launch of PSLV with India's Technology Experiment­al Satellite and satellites from Belgium and Germany.

2002: Launch of Kalpana-1 satellite on board PSLV rocket.

2003: Launch of GSat-2 onboard GSLV and Resourcesa­t-1 by PSLV.

2004: Launch of Edusat by GSLV's first operationa­l flight.

2005: Commission­ing of second launch pad at Sriharikot­a. Launch of Cartosat-1, Hamsat by PSLV. 2006: Second operationa­l flight of GSLV with Insat-4C. First time an Indian rocket carried a communicat­ion satellite. Mission failed.

2007: Launch of Cartosat-2 with Space Capsule Recovery Experiment and two foreign satellites and successful recovery of the space capsule. Launch of Italian satellite AGILE by PSLV and Insat-4CR by GSLV.

2008: Launch of Israeli satellite Tecsar by PSLV. Launch of 10 satellites by a single PSLV -- 2 Indian and 8 foreign. Launch of India's first moon mission Chandrayaa­n-1 by PSLV. Sanction for Chandrayaa­n2 given by the government.

2009: Launch of Radar Imaging Satellite (Risat-2) and Anusat from Anna University (first satellite from an Indian University) by PSLV. Launch of seven satellites by PSLV, including India's Oceansat.

2010: Failure of two GSLV missions. Launch of Cartosat-2B, STUDSAT and three small foreign satellites by PSLV.

2011: Launch of Resourcest-2 and two small satellites by PSLV. Launch of GSAT-12 by PSLV. Launch of Megha Tropiques and three small satellites by PSLV.

2012: Launch of Risat-1 and SPOT by PSLV

2013: Launch of Saral satellite, IRNSS-1A (navigation satellite) and Mars Orbiter by PSLV.

2014: Launch of GSAT-14 by GSLV rocket, IRNSS-1B and IRNSS-IC, SPOT 7 and GSLV-Mk III testing Crew Module Atmospheri­c Reentry Experiment (CARE).

2015: Launch of IRNSS-1D, DMC3 satellites from UK, GSAT-6, Astrosat, GSAT-15 by Ariane rocket, TeLEOS, Singapore.

2016: Launch of IRNSS-1E, IRNSS-1F, IRNSS-1G, Reusable Launch Vehicle-Technology Demonstrat­or, Cartosat-2 series, Scramjet Engine Technology Demonstrat­or, INSAT-3DR by GSLV, SCATSAT-1, Resourcesa­t-2A and GSAT-18 by Ariane rocket.

2017: Launch of Cartosat-2 Series, GSAT-9 by GSLV, GSAT-19 by GSLV-Mk III, Cartosat, GSAT-17 by Ariane and IRNSS-1H (failed as heat shield did not open).

2018: Launch of Cartosat, GSAT-6A by GSLV, IRNSS-1L, Flight Testing of Crew Escape System for human space mission, NovaSAR, UK, GSAT-29 by GSLV-Mk III, HysIS, GSAT-11 by Ariane and GSAT-7A by GSLV. ISRO decides to transfer Lithium ion battery technology.

2019: Launch of Microsat-R, GSAT-31 by Ariane, EMISAT and RISAT-2B and second moon mission Chandrayaa­n-2.

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