Kuwait Times

India puts 104 satellites in orbit

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SRIHARIKOT­A, India: India successful­ly put a record 104 satellites from a single rocket into orbit yesterday in the latest triumph for its famously frugal space program. Celebratio­ns erupted among scientists at the southern spaceport of Sriharikot­a as the head of India’s Space Research Organisati­on (ISRO) announced all the satellites had been ejected as planned. “My hearty congratula­tions to the ISRO team for this success,” the agency’s director Kiran Kumar told those gathered in an observator­y to track the progress of the Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV).

Prime Minister Narendra Modi congratula­ted the scientists for achieving the feat which smashes a record previously held by Russia. “They have hit a century in space technology,” Modi said at an election rally in northern Uttar Pradesh state. The rocket took off at 9:28am (0358 GMT) and cruised at a speed of 27,000 km per hour, ejecting all the 104 satellites into orbit in around 30 minutes, according to ISRO.

The rocket’s main cargo was a 714-kg satellite for Earth observatio­n but it was also loaded with 103 smaller “nano satellites”, weighing a combined 664 kg. The smallest weighed only 1.1 kg. Nearly all of the nano satellites are from other countries, including Israel, Kazakhstan, Switzerlan­d and 96 from the United States. Eighty-eight of them are from Planet Inc - a San Francisco-based Earth imagery company - and weigh 4.5 kg each. Only three satellites belonged to India.

Scientists sat transfixed as they watched the progress of the rocket on monitors until the last payload was ejected, and then began punching the air in triumph and hugging each other. This was PSLV’s 39th successful mission, known as India’s space workhorse. The launch means India now holds the record for launching the most satellites in one go, surpassing Russia which launched 39 satellites in a single mission in June 2014.

And it is another feather in the cap for ISRO which sent an unmanned rocket to orbit Mars in 2013 at a cost of just $73 million, compared with NASA’s Maven Mars mission which had a $671 million price tag. ISRO is also mulling the idea of missions to Jupiter and Venus. The business of putting commercial satellites into space for a fee is growing as phone, Internet and other companies, as well as countries, seek greater and more high-tech communicat­ions.

India has carved out a reputation as a reliable low-cost option, relying in part on its famed skill of “jugaad” - creating a cheap alternativ­e solution. Experts say much of its credibilit­y stems from India’s successful launch of the Mars orbiter, which gave it an edge over its rivals in the space race.

“India is proving to be a very viable option because of the cost and the reliabilit­y factor,” said Ajay Lele, a senior fellow at the Delhi-based

Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses. “India has been doing these launches successful­ly and has establishe­d itself as a very reliable player.” Mathieu J Weiss, a liaison officer for France’s CNES national space agency who is currently in India, said ISRO had pulled off a major feat. “It’s a great technical challenge to launch so many satellites at once into orbit on the right trajectory so that they don’t make contact with each other,” he told AFP. Weiss said India had become a major player in the space race by making itself very competitiv­e with its low costs and by working with private companies which are space specialist­s. “India has become a space power in its own right in recent years,” he added.

Last June, India set a national record after it successful­ly launched a rocket carrying 20 satellites, including 13 from the US. The 50-year-old space agency plans to send four more rockets into space later this year ahead of its second lunar mission Chandrayaa­n-2 slated for 2018. Modi has often hailed India’s budget space technology, quipping in 2014 that a rocket that launched four foreign satellites into orbit had cost less to make than Hollywood film “Gravity”. — AFP

 ?? — AFP ?? SRIHARIKOT­A, India: Onlookers watch the launch of the Indian Space Research Organisati­on (ISRO) Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV-C37) yesterday.
— AFP SRIHARIKOT­A, India: Onlookers watch the launch of the Indian Space Research Organisati­on (ISRO) Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV-C37) yesterday.

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