Sriharikota: An Indian rocket on Sunday successfully put into orbit two foreign satellites, marking Indian space agency ISRO’s 100th mission in the presence of Prime Minister Dr Manmohan Singh.
“As ISRO’s 100th space mission, today’s launch is a milestone in our nation’s space capabilities,” the Prime Minister said here after the launch.
Exactly at 9.53 am, Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle-C21 (PSLV-C21), 44 metres tall and weighing around 230 tonne, with a one-way ticket, hurtled itself towards the skies ferrying the two satellites — SPOT 6, a 712-kg French earth observation satellite, and Proiteres, a 15-kg Japanese micro satellite.
The PSLV, costing around Rs 90 crore, blasted off from the Satish Dhawan Space Centre in Sriharikota, around 80 km from Chennai.
The Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) has now completed its 100th mission since the launch of its first satellite, Aryabhata, in 1975 by a Russian rocket.
With a rich orange flame at its tail and plume of white smoke, PSLV-C21 ascended towards the sky amid cheers of ISRO scientists and media team assembled at the launch centre.
Scientists at ISRO’s new mission control room were glued to their computer screens watching the rocket escape the earth’s gravitational pull.
At around 18 minutes into the flight, PSLV-C21 delivered SPOT 6 and a few seconds later Proiteres into their intended polar orbits.
On the successful ejection of the satellites, scientists at mission control were visibly relieved and started clapping.
Dr Singh, who along with Minister in Prime Minister’s Office, V Narayanasamy, witnessed the launch, congratulated ISRO scientists and engineers and EADS Astrium of France and Osaka Institute of Technology of Japan for the successful launch of their satellites.
“Questions are sometimes asked about whether a poor country like India can afford a space programme and whether the funds spent on space exploration, albeit modest, could be better utilised elsewhere.
“This misses the point that a nation’s state of development is finally a product of its technological prowess,” the Prime Minister said.
The remote sensing satellites sent back pictures and other data.
SPOT 6 is the heaviest foreign satellite to be carried by a PSLV since 1999 when ISRO started launching satellites of foreign agencies.
Proiteres will study powered flight of another satellite and observe Japan’s Kansai district with a high-resolution camera.
Declining to reveal the carriage fee received from French and Japanese agencies for launching their satellites, Radhakrishnan said the mission revenue had recovered the rocket’s cost.
Till date, ISRO has successfully launched 27 foreign satellites and Sunday’s mission took the tally to 29. (IANS)