BY PTI | MAY 28, 2017,
11.32 AM IST
By Pallava Bagla
NEW DELHI: An indigenous rocket as heavy as 200
full-grown Asian elephants could well be the one taking "Indians into
space from Indian soil" as the country inches closer to joining the big
boy's space club.
Standing tall on the rocket port at Sriharikota
in Andhra Pradesh is the country's latest rocket called the Geosynchronous
Satellite Launch Vehicle Mark III (GSLV Mk- III), the heaviest rocket ever made
by India that is capable of
carrying the heaviest satellites till now.The Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO)
enters into a bold new world muscling its way to make its mark in the world's
heavy weight multi-billion dollar launch market.
"We are pushing ourselves to the limits to
ensure that this new fully self-reliant Indian rocket succeeds in its maiden
launch," ISRO chairman A S Kiran Kumar said. It is
the maiden experimental launch of GSLV-Mk III earlier named Launch Vehicle
Mark-3, but if all goes on well in a decade or after a slew of at least half a
dozen successful launches, this rocket could be India's vehicle of choice to
launch "Indians into space, from Indian soil using Indian rockets".
This heavy lift rocket is capable of placing up to 8 tons in
a low Earth orbit, enough to carry India's crew module.
ISRO has already prepared plans of hoisting a
2-3 member human crew into space as soon as the government gives it a sanction of
about 3-4 billion dollars.
If the human venture materialises, India would
become only the fourth country after Russia, the US and China to have a human
space flight program.
Incidentally ISRO asserts the first Indian to go
into space could well be a woman!
"In principle, it will be the GSLV Mk-3 or
its variant that will be human rated in future," Kumar confirms.
In the intense pre-monsoon heat, India's rocket
port is buzzing with feverish activity as engineers from the Indian space
agency get set to launch an all new indigenously-made rocket.
It is the heaviest fully-functional rocket to
reach the launch pad weighing 640 tons or almost 5 times the weight of a fully
loaded Jumbo Jet airplane. The new rocket is capable of carrying satellites
of four ton class into the geosynchronous orbit and opens a whole new window
through which ISRO can now explore the universe.
It is estimated that the new rocket costs a
whopping Rs 300 crore but the country would end up saving almost as much when
an Indian launcher is to place New Delhi's communication satellites.Today India uses the French Ariane-5 rocket
launched from Kourou in South America to place its heavy 4 ton class of
communication satellites.
Kumar asserts that the GSLV-Mk III is a rocket
designed and made in India from scratch and hence engineers from ISRO are very
keen to tame this new monster in its very first attempt.
Not an easy task, since India's track record
suggests that maiden launches of its rockets often end up in failure.
The Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV) failed
on its maiden launch in 1993 and since then it has had 38 consecutively
successful launches and the Geosynchronous Satellite Launch Vehicle Mk-1 (GSLV
Mk-1) failed in 2001 and since then it has 11 launches with half of them
successful.
Space fairing is a very risky business and all
nations the US, France and Japan and even the new private companies have had
failures in recent times like the spectacular Falcon-9 rocket in 2016.
Hopefully, the GSLV-Mk III will break that jinx.
India already has two operational rockets -- the
workhorse PSLV that can hoist satellites of 1.5 tons into space and was the
preferred vehicle for India's maiden mission to Moon and Mars.
The second -- the Geosynchronous Satellite
Launch Vehicle Mark II can hoist 2 ton class of satellites and because of its
repeated failures it was dubbed 'the naughty boy of ISRO'
Between
them, ISRO has done 50 launches and recently even earned a world record by
successfully placing 104 satellites in orbit.
The new GSLV-Mk III is an all new vehicle
designed and developed in India and in 2014 a sub-orbital successful test of
this vehicle was conducted to understand how it performs in the atmosphere.
The rocket never went into space but helped test
India's future astronaut capsule. It had a dummy cryogenic engine and was a
single stage vehicle.
Even though the GSLV-Mk III is 43-m-tall, making it the
shortest of the three big Indian rockets, it carries a huge punch as it weighs
almost 1.5 times heavier than India's next biggest rocket the GSLV Mk-2 and
almost twice as heavy as India's PSLV.
This monster rocket has an elegant design and is
capable of carrying loads equal to the weight of two sports utility vehicles or
SUVs into space.
The massive first stage along with strap-on
boosters weighs 610 tons and comprises multiple engines all firing nearly
simultaneously. It is the second stage which is all together a new animal for
this mammoth rocket, it is a novel Indian cryogenic engine that weighs about 30
tons.
The new cryogenic engine is being tested on a
fully functional rocket for the first time and it is the development of this
technology that uses liquid oxygen and liquid hydrogen as propellant is what
took more than 15 years for Indians to master.
There is a lot of excitement at the rocket port
as Kumar says "a whole new rocket and an entirely new class of a high
through put satellite system is all set to be launched"
Read more at:
http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/articleshow/58878253.cms?utm_source=contentofinterest&utm_medium=text&utm_campaign=cppst
http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/articleshow/58878253.cms?utm_source=contentofinterest&utm_medium=text&utm_campaign=cppst
No comments:
Post a Comment