GSAT-10, the country's newest and heaviest satellite, was launched in
the wee hours of Saturday from the Kourou launchpad in French Guiana in
South America. It will directly boost telecommunications and
direct-to-home broadcasting among others.
The satellite, 9th in ISRO's present fleet, will be operational in
November and add 30 transponders to the domestic INSAT system, Indian
Space Research Organisation (ISRO) said soon after the launch.
The ISRO launched the 3.4-tonne spacecraft on the European Ariane 5
rocket as the agency cannot currently launch satellites of such mass on
its own vehicles. The satellite and the launch fee cost the agency Rs.
750 crore.
The ISRO called its 101st mission "a grand success," adding that the satellite was in good health.
ISRO's Chairman and Secretary, Department of Space, Dr. K.
Radhakrishnan, and senior scientists have been at the Master Control
Facility, Hassan (some 80 km from Bangalore) since Friday evening. It is
also the first time that the Chairman was not present at the launch
site.Other Indian scientists present at Kourou included Director, Satellite
communications, Prahlad Rao and Project Director T.K.Anuradha.
What the satellite brings
It carries 30 communication transponders - 12 in Ku-band, 12 in C-band
and six in extended C-band. The ISRO is currently leasing 95 foreign
transpondes to meet domestic demand. The INSAT/GSAT system has 168
transponders.
The Ku band is vital for seven DTH TV operators and thousands of VSAT
operators who provide phone and Internet broadband connections. Public
and private telephone and television providers also use the C band.
GSAT-10 also has the second GAGAN payload which augments or finetunes
the US GPS signals into far more accurate readings. GAGAN, a venture of
the Department of Sapce and Airports authority of India, is primarily
meant to benefit airlines and their aircraft flying into and out of
India. GSAT-8, launched in May 2008, carried the first GAGAN payload.
The flight at 2.58 a.m. IST was preceded by a countdown lasting for 11.5
hours. By 3.19 a.m. it was visible to scientists waiting to capture its
signals at Hassan.
"MCF took over command and control of the satellite immediately after
the injection. Preliminary health checks on various subsystems such as
power, thermal, command, sensors, control etc., have been performed and
all parameters have been found to be satisfactory. The satellite has
been oriented towards Earth and the Sun using the onboard propulsion
systems," the agency said.
In the coming days, MCF scientists will perform routine manoeuvres to
"raise" the elliptical orbit into a circular orbit with 24-hour rotation
around the Earth and fixed at 83 degrees East slot over the Indian
region at 36,000 km above ground. They will do this by firing the apogee
motors on board the satellite in three steps. Later the antenna, solar panels and other instruments will be deployed and switched on.
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