Isro launches 14 satellites, marking success after Chandrayaan-2 setback
India
launched 14 satellites
Wednesday morning, boosting the morale of its space agency which lost
contact with a spacecraft to trying to land on the moon in September.
Polar
Satellite Launch Vehicle-C47 (PSLV-C47) placed in orbit India's earth
observation satellite Cartosat-3 and 13 nano-satellites for the US
when it blasted off from the Indian Space Research Organisation
(Isro's) Satish Dhawan Space Centre in Sriharikota at 9:28am.
Seventeen
minutes after lift-off, Cartosat-3 separated from the launch vehicle
and put into orbit. The 13 US satellites will be launched in the next
eight minutes, completing the first business order of Isro's newly
formed commercial arm NewSpace India Ltd.
Cartosat-3,
India’s third-generation earth observation satellite, will be used
for large-scale urban planning and to monitor coastal land, rural
resources and infrastructure development. The satellite, which will
last for five years and weighs 1,625kg, can pick a 25-cm object from
its orbital perch about 509 km away, making it one of the sharpest
earth-imagers. Read
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