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ISRO Launches PSLV C-35 With 8 Satellites Successfully From Sriharikota

ISRO launches nine weather satellites successfully from Sriharikota.

The ISRO control room in Sriharikota (Source: Twitter/@isro)
The ISRO control room in Sriharikota (Source: Twitter/@isro)

PSLV C-35, carrying India’s SCATSAT-1 meant for ocean and weather studies and seven other satellites including from the U.S. and Canada, lifted off from the spaceport in Sriharikota on Monday.

Besides SCATSAT-1, the 44.4 metre tall ISRO’s workhorse PSLV rocket is carrying two Indian university satellites, three from Algeria and one each from the U.S. and Canada.

For the first time in its mission, the PSLV will launch its payloads in two different orbits. There will be two Fourth Stage Engine restarts for this purpose.

PSLV C-35 took off from the Satish Dhawan Space Centre in Sriharikota, about 110 kilometer from Chennai at 9:12 a.m.

SCATSAT-1, the primary satellite, is meant for weather forecasting, cyclone detection and tracking.

It is a “continuity” mission for the Ku-band scatterometer payload carried by SCATSAT-1, which has enhanced features compared to a similar one carried by Oceansat-2 satellite in 2009, ISRO said. The two academic satellites are PRATHAM, from IIT, Bombay, and PISAT, from BES University, Bengaluru and its consortium.

While PRATHAM’s objective is to estimate Total Electron Count, PISAT’s mission is to design and develop a nanosatellite for remote sensing applications.

The foreign satellites onboard the PSLV are ALSAT-1B, ALSAT-2B and ALSAT-1N (all from Algeria) and Pathfinder-1 and NLS-19, from USA and Canada, respectively.

While SCATSAT-1 has been released first into a 730 kilometre Polar Sunsynchronous Orbit (SSO) , the rest will be injected into a lower orbit of 689 kilometres after around two hours.