PSLV-C45
Ignition of the PSLV-QL launch vehicle at the start of flight C45 | |
PSLV-QL launch | |
---|---|
Launch | 1 April 2019 (2019-04-01), 03:57:00 UTC |
Operator | DRDO |
Pad | Sriharikota Second |
Payload | 29 satellites
|
Outcome | Success |
PSLV launches | |
← PSLV-C44 PSLV-C46 → |
The PSLV-C45[1] is the 47th mission of the Indian Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV) program. The Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV)-C45 was launched on 1 April 2019 with a payload of 29 satellites, including one for electronic intelligence, along with 28 customer satellites from other countries.
Details
The PSLV-C45 was launched from the second launch pad of the Satish Dhawan Space Centre in Sriharikota, Andhra pradesh,India. The PSLV C45 rocket carried primary payloads like EMISAT and secondary payloads like M6P, BlueWalker 1, four Lemur-2 out of a total of thirty satellites.[2] EMISAT[3] is developed by DRDO.[4] The EMISAT satellite is based on the IMS-2 bus inherited from SARAL. The nature of the payload has not been officially confirmed.
It was the first flight of PSLV-QL,[1] having 4 strap-on boosters and placed a primary payload EMISAT and a secondary payload of multiple cubesats, for example 4 Lemur-2 satellites and the M6P satellite, in Sun-synchronous orbits.
Uniqueness of the project
The specialty of this mission is that for the first time PSLV will launch satellites in Three different orbits.[5][6][7] Another distinguished feature of the project is for the first time, PSLV with four strap-on[2] configuration has been identified for this mission. Until now, PSLV has been in either two or six strap-on configuration or without any strap-ons. it is also the first PSLV to have fourth stage (PS4) that uses solar panels to support payloads hosted on it, seen as a precursor to the PSLV Orbital Experiment Module.[8]
Sequence of launch
Mission starts with the injection of the satellite EMISAT into orbit at 780 km, then it will inject 29 satellites into orbit at 504 km and later the fourth stage will move to 485 km orbit to carry out scientific experiments.
The launch was originally scheduled for 21 March 2019, but was delayed to 1 April "to ensure system readiness for a perfect launch".[9]
Mission overview
- Propellant:
- Stage 1: composite solid
- Stage 2: Earth storable liquid
- Stage 3: composite solid
- Stage 4: Earth storable liquid
- Altitude: 780 kilometres (485 mi)
[2]
The PSLV C45 rocket had four stages; each one was self-contained, with its own propulsion system, thereby capable of functioning independently.[2] The first and third stages used composite solid propellants, while the second stage used earth-storable liquid propellant and fourth one fitted with Solar Panels.[2]
References
- ^ a b "PSLV". Space.skyrocket.de. Retrieved 25 February 2019.
- ^ a b c d e "PSLV C45 Press kit" (PDF). 23 March 2019. Archived from the original (PDF) on 23 March 2019. Retrieved 26 March 2019.
- ^ "EMISAT". Space.skyrocket.de. Retrieved 25 February 2019.
- ^ "First in India's space history, Isro's PSLV-C45 to release payloads in 3 orbits - Times of India". The Times of India. Retrieved 2019-03-26.
- ^ "India to launch first 3 orbit mission with PSLV-C45 on March 21". Business Standard. 24 February 2019. Retrieved 25 February 2019.
- ^ "India All Set To Launch Its First Mission That Will Put 30 Satellites In 3 Different Orbits". Indiatimes.com. 24 February 2019. Retrieved 25 February 2019.
- ^ Economictimes. "ISRO will launch first 3 orbit mission with PSLV-C45 on March 21". Economictimes.indiatimes.com. Retrieved 25 February 2019.
- ^ "ISRO set for first three-orbit mission of PSLV-C45 on March". The Times of India. 15 February 2019. Retrieved 25 February 2019.
- ^ "Isro set for next PSLV-C45 launch on April 1 - Times of India". The Times of India. Retrieved 15 March 2019.
External links
- PSLV-C45 / EMISAT Mission
- v
- t
- e
- PSLV-C15 (12 Jul 2010)
- PSLV-C16 (20 Apr 2011)
- PSLV-C17 (15 Jul 2011)
- PSLV-C18 (12 Oct 2011)
- PSLV-C19 (26 Apr 2012)
- PSLV-C21 (9 Sep 2012)
- PSLV-C20 (25 Feb 2013)
- PSLV-C22 (IRNSS-1A, 1 Jul 2013)
- PSLV-C25 (Mars Orbiter Mission, 5 Nov 2013)
- PSLV-C24 (IRNSS-1B, 4 Apr 2014)
- PSLV-C23 (30 Jun 2014)
- PSLV-C26 (IRNSS-1C, 16 Oct 2014)
- PSLV-C27 (IRNSS-1D, 28 Mar 2015)
- PSLV-C28 (DMC-3, 10 Jul 2015)
- PSLV-C30 (28 Sep 2015)
- PSLV-C29 (16 Dec 2015)
- PSLV-C31 (IRNSS-1E, 20 Jan 2016)
- PSLV-C32 (IRNSS-1F, 10 Mar 2016)
- PSLV-C33 (IRNSS-1G, 28 Apr 2016)
- PSLV-C34 (22 Jun 2016)
- PSLV-C35 (SCATSAT-1, 26 Sep 2016)
- PSLV-C36 (Resourcesat-2A, 7 Dec 2016)
- PSLV-C37 (15 Feb 2017)
- PSLV-C38 (23 Jun 2017)
- PSLV-C39 (IRNSS-1H, 31 Aug 2017, failure)
- PSLV-C40 (Cartosat-2F, 12 Jan 2018)
- PSLV-C41 (IRNSS-1I, 11 Apr 2018)
- PSLV-C42 (16 Sep 2018)
- PSLV-C43 (HySIS, 29 Nov 2018)
- PSLV-C44 (Microsat-R, 24 Jan 2019)
- PSLV-C45 (EMISAT, 1 Apr 2019)
- PSLV-C46 (RISAT-2B, 22 May 2019)
- PSLV-C47 (Cartosat-3, 27 Nov 2019)
- PSLV-C48 (RISAT-2BR1, 11 Dec 2019)
- PSLV-C49 (EOS-01, 7 Nov 2020)
- PSLV-C50 (CMS-01, 17 Dec 2020)
- PSLV-C51 (Amazônia-1, 28 Feb 2021)
- PSLV-C52 (EOS-04, 14 Feb 2022)
- PSLV-C53 (DS-EO, NeuSAR, Scoob-1, POEM-1 (hosted), 30 Jun 2022)
- PSLV-C54 (EOS-06, BhutanSat aka INS-2B, Anand, 26 Nov 2022)
- PSLV-C55 (TeLEOS-2, Lumelite-4, POEM-2 (hosted), 22 Apr 2023)
- PSLV-C56 (DS-SAR, VELOX-AM, 30 Jul 2023)
- PSLV-C57 (Aditya-L1, 2 Sep 2023)
- PSLV-C58 (XPoSat, POEM-3 (hosted), 1 Jan 2024)
- List of PSLV launches
- Italics indicates future missions