Context

ISRO’s Maiden SSLV Mission Runs Into A Technical Glitch; Satellites No Longer Usable

Ujjawal MishraAug 08, 2022, 03:17 PM | Updated 03:17 PM IST
SSLV-D1/EOS-02 Mission

SSLV-D1/EOS-02 Mission


ISRO launched its new launcher, SSLV, but the mission developed an issue that has rendered the backpack satellites unusable.

Context: The launch vehicle was shot into space from the spaceport in Sriharikota at 9:18 am on 7 August (IST). It carried the 135 kg Earth Observation Satellite (EOS) 02 and the 7.3 kg student nano satellite AzaadiSAT.

  • The EOS-02 was an experimental optical remote sensing satellite with a high spatial resolution for application in areas like agriculture, forestry, geology, and hydrology.

  • AzaadiSAT, a tribute to India’s celebration of ‘Azaadi ka Amrit Mahotsav’, was a cubesat weighing around 8 kg. It comprised 75 different payloads each weighing around 50 g, built by girl students from across India’s rural regions.

  • Trouble: After the rocket launch, all the regular stages were completed successfully before an issue cropped up in the terminal stage.

    • “The satellites were placed in an elliptical orbit in place of a circular orbit,” ISRO chairman S Somanath said in a statement.

  • A tweet from ISRO said: “SSLV-D1/EOS-02 Mission: Maiden flight of SSLV is completed. All stages performed as expected. Data loss is observed during the terminal stage. It is being analysed. Will be updated soon.”

  • “The 356 km circular orbit was our intended orbit, but it (the launch vehicle) could place the satellite in an orbit of 356 x 76 km,” Somanath said later in his video statement.

  • The cause: “It is primarily due to one of logic that exist (sic) in the rocket to identify a sensor failure and go for a salvage option. That means the system has a deficiency which we need to look at very carefully and correct it with regard to a sensor isolation principle,” Somanath said.

    • The satellites will “come down” due to “atmospheric drag.”

  • “The satellites have already come down from that orbit and they are no longer usable,” the ISRO chief said.

  • Corrections: A team of experts has already gotten to work on better understanding the issue and determining why the satellites were placed in the wrong orbit.

    • The team will present recommendations that are expected to be implemented quickly.


    What's the SSLV: It stands for "small satellite launch vehicle."

    • The SSLV is a three-stage vehicle.

  • Whereas solid fuel fires its first three stages (87 t, 7.7 t, and 4.5 t), satellite insertion into the intended orbit is achieved through a liquid propulsion-based velocity trimming module as the terminal stage.

  • The launcher is 34 m tall, about 10 m less than the PSLV.

  • The SSLV diameter, at 2 m, is also lower than the 2.8 m of the PSLV.

  • There’s also a 200 tonne difference in lift-off mass between the SSLV (120 tonnes) and PSLV (320 tonnes).

  • Why SSLV matters: The SSLV promises low turnaround time, flexibility in accommodating multiple satellites, launch-on-demand feasibility, and minimal launch infrastructure requirements.

    • There’s a handsome demand among developing countries, private corporations, and educational institutions for the launch of small satellites, weighing up to 500 kg, into 500 km low-Earth orbit (LEO).

  • Larger launch vehicles, like the PSLV, are not ideal for smaller players.

  • The SSLV will, therefore, be used to deploy small satellites — spanning 10 kg to 500 kg — in LEO.

  • Bottomline: The SSLV is slated to become the next ISRO workhorse, playing a key role in the commercial small satellite launch services.

    Small setbacks like this one are okay in what is set to be a highly promising course for India's decorated space sector.

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