ISRO General News and Updates

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Is this a recent one?? I guess this is the 3rd successful test of C-25 engine.. which will be used in recent mk-iii launch..
Enough discussed, posted photos & videos in previous pages. I can't understand why people are posting old news again & again.


It's upper stage of GSLV Mk3 & future LVM3.

Once, Semi Cryo stage will be ready, we can use clustered engines to make HLV.
 

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ISRO nano twins stabilise in space
The INS 1A and INS 1B, experimental nano satellites built by ISRO, were among the 104 satellites launched by ISRO’s PSLV C37 rocket.
Written by Johnson TA | Bengaluru |
Published on:March 9, 2017 2:09 AM


ISRO
The two nano satellites of ISRO that had caused problems since being launched on February 15 on a PSLV workhorse rocket have stabilised, the space agency informed on Wednesday. The INS 1A and INS 1B, experimental nano satellites built by ISRO, were among the 104 satellites launched by ISRO’s PSLV C37 rocket. All the other satellites — among them ISRO’s Cartosat 2D and 88 nano satellites belonging to the US start-up Planet Labs —were reported to be stable, ISRO had reported trouble with stabilising the nano satellites.
“After initial hiccups, things have settled and the satellites are under our control,’’ the director of ISRO’s satellite centre, Mylaswamy Annadurai, said. “Unlike large satellites, where we are able to provide more control system like thrusters, in a nano satellite the control facility is limited as availability of power is limited. Nano satellites are an experimental programme in ISRO,’’ Annadurai said.
The nano satellites, weighing 8.4 kg and 9.7 kg, were reported to be displaying uneven parameters after launch. Sources in the space agency reported “some difficulties in signals’’ between the two satellites and ground stations. ISRO put out images taken from the Cartosat 2D satellite on its website a couple days after the launch but did not reveal the status of INS 1A and INS 1B.
The nano satellites are carrying instruments from ISRO’s Space Application Centre and the Laboratory for Electro Optic Systems. Data gathered will be used by the two agencies. “The nano satellites are an experimental class of satellites introduced by ISRO because there are requests from academic institutions to use them for data collection. The universities do not have the knowledge to build satellites and tend to take a long time… We want them to focus on the instruments as we can provide the nano satellite bus,’’ an ISRO official said.
In a record-breaking launch on February 15, PSLV C 37 had carried 88 nano satellites from Planet Labs, eight satellites from another US mapping start-up called Spire, one each from the Netherlands, Israel, the UAE, Kazakhstan and Switzerland, apart from ISRO’S two nano satellites and the Cartosat 2 series satellite.
 

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Slightly Off topic


1972, NASA Graphic of the Space Shuttle orbiter. Interesting to see the jet engine tucked inside the payload bay. An idea that was abandoned.
 

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Story of the Week - Indian Space Research Organization
CME Programme of DECU- A Social Research Perspective

The telemedicine programme of ISRO started as one of the societal applications of space technology, with a vision to provide quality medical services to the needy patients across the country. In this pursuit, ISRO had arranged Satellite Communication (Satcom) connectivity, diagnostic equipment, telemedicine hardware and software to various hospitals/medical colleges. The network is satellite based, with its central hub located in Bengaluru.
Continuing Medical Education (CME) programme was started during November 2014 and since then every month, one CME programme is conducted from Development and Educational Communication Unit (DECU) of ISRO. The Purpose of CME is to help medical professionals to upgrade their knowledge and share experiences. About 119 Telemedicine nodes are presently active in different hospitals, medical colleges, health centres, and mobile health vans across the country. The medical fraternity across these institutions stands to get benefited through CME.
Social Research and Evaluation Division (SRED) of Programme Planning and Evaluation Group (PPEG), DECU-ISRO observes the CME programme online as well as takes feedback from the participating centres. SRED uses both qualitative and quantitative methods for obtaining feedback. During each CME programme, online observation of the programme is done at a student node adjoining to the DECU studio, which is being used as teaching node. Systematic observation method is used for obtaining data. The observation of the programme includes understanding on how the programme is conducted, timing of the programmes, and quality of the audio-video during the lecture and interactive session and details of participating Centres in interactive session.
In addition to the above observations, Doctor’s opinion regarding his overall experience, technical quality and interactions during CME programme is obtained immediately at the end of programme. The list of all the Telemedicine nodes which logged in during CME Programme is received from ISTRAC Hub. Afterwards, all the participated Tele-medicine nodes are contacted through telephone and their feedback regarding the CME sessions and quality of the programme is collected. Opinion on aspects regarding audio video quality, level of satisfaction, number of participants, satisfaction level of the participants and suggestions are also obtained through the feedback.
26 CME programmes were conducted from November 2014 to February 2017. The average session is of 71 minutes, out of which the lecture session is of 47 minutes and interactive session is of 24 minutes. Mode of teaching includes Power Point Presentations, Still Images and Video Clips. Nearly, 5250 medical professionals ranging from doctors, professors, medical students to para-medics have participated in CME programme so far. Around 150 other staff like technicians, nurses and attendants have also participated programmes. A total of 284 questions have been asked in interactive sessions. Major topics covered by CME are in the area of pediatrics, gynecology, general medicine, orthopedics, cardio-vascular diseases, life style diseases including diabetes and hypertension, oncology, dermatology, urology, pulmonology, neurology, psychiatry, ophthalmology, laboratory investigation and clinical applications.
The doctors participated in the CME programmes are satisfied and are of the opinion that medical professionals can upgrade their knowledge through CME. Also, they felt that the CME programme can be utilised for doctors, medical students, para-medical staff and common people for educational and training purposes. They also insist on continuing and extending CME to the remote regions of the country. The majority of participating Telemedicine centres are satisfied with the content and usefulness of the CME. Overall suggestions from the participating Centres and suggestions pertaining to technical quality of the programme provided by SRED/PPEG are being implemented by the technical team.
Video on 26th CME Programme


Interaction Between Expert Doctors and Centres



Behind the Screen


Participants Interacting with Specialist Doctor




Story of the Week - Archive
Mar 13, 2017 : CME Programme of DECU- A Social Research Perspective
Mar 06, 2017 : NARL Celebrates Silver Jubilee of Establishment of MST Radar
Feb 27, 2017 : 50th High Performance Motor Case (HPS3) for Third Stage of PSLV Realised
Feb 20, 2017 : The Unique Triumph of PSLV-C37
Feb 13, 2017 : Space Technology Inputs to Operationalise Flood Early Warning System (FLEWS) in Assam
Feb 06, 2017 : Indigenous development of Telemetry & Telecommand Processor (TTCP)
Jan 30, 2017 : Polar Sea Ice Monitoring using SCATSAT-1 Data
 

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ISRO Scientists And Engineers: Demand Increases, Expect More Recruitment



ISRO Scientists and Engineers: Demand Increases, Expect More Recruitment

New Delhi: To meet the work load arising from the demand for space based services, Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) may hire more scientists and Engineers in its facilities in the coming years. In this purpose, a proposal for suitably augmenting the manpower in ISRO, mostly in scientist and engineer category, has been prepared. The proposal is reviewed and recommended by the space commission.

Currently, a total of 7062 personnel are working as Scientists and Engineers in ISRO. The demand for space based services in the country is increasing resulting in increased launch frequency and applications of space technology in emerging areas.

To meet the work load arising due to these demands, a proposal for suitably augmenting the manpower, mostly in scientist/engineer category in ISRO, has been prepared, an information given by Minister Dr. Jitendra Singh in Lok Sabha said.

He also said that the proposal has been reviewed and recommended by the Space Commission and the same is submitted to the Department of Expenditure, Ministry of Finance, for their recommendations, before placing the same for the approval of the Union Cabinet.

Read: More updates on Indian Space Research Organisation Recruitment

This information was provided by the Union Minister of State (Independent Charge) for Development of North-Eastern Region (DoNER), MoS PMO, Personnel, Public Grievances & Pensions, Atomic Energy and Space, Dr Jitendra Singh in written reply to a question in Lok Sabha today.
 

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Seven Teams Qualify For Indian Private Moon Mission
Indo-Asian News Service | Updated: Mar 16, 2017 05:14 IST



Bengaluru: Seven teams, including three from India, have qualified for the country's first private moon mission in December, space technology start-up TeamIndus said on Wednesday.

"Teams Callisto, Ears and Kalpana from India, Space4Life from Italy, Lunadome from Britain, Killa Lab from Peru and Regolith Revolution from the US have qualified to fly their experiments to the lunar surface in our spacecraft," said a TeamIndus statement.

The state-run Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) will fly TeamIndus spacecraft (robot) on its PSLV (Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle) or rocket from its Sriharikota spaceport in Andhra Pradesh, about 80 km northeast of Chennai.

The city-based TeamIndus is competing in the 30-million dollar Google Lunar Xprize, a global contest to develop low-cost methods of robotic space exploration.

"Space4Life from Naples in Italy will send an experiment to the lunar surface under the Lab2Moon Challenge to test the effectiveness of using a colony of cyanobacteria as a shield against harmful radiation in space," the statement added.

Cyanobacteria are micro-organisms capable of photosynthesis to produce oxygen using sunlight. They represent the earliest known form of life on earth.

The India-based team, which proposed an experiment to explore photosynthesis on the moon, will fly along with Space4Life to the lunar surface.

"Team Space4Life will work with TeamIndus engineers to make the experiment space worthy for the journey of a lifetime," said the statement.

An international jury comprising former ISRO Chairman K. Kasturirangan, former European Space Agency Chairman Alain Bensoussan and Yale University's Astronomy Professor Priyamvada Natarajan examined the prototypes of the experiments in granular detail over the last three days here.

"Congratulations to Space4Life. The data from its experiment have the potential to dramatically impact mankind," said Kasturirangan in the statement.

Launched in mid-2016, Lab2Moon, a global challenge for youth, inspired about 3,000 teams to send in ideas for experiments.

The Lunar Xprize requires privately funded teams to land their rovers on the surface of the moon, travel 500 metres and broadcast high-definition video, images and data back to earth.

In a launch window starting on December 28, the PSLV will inject the spacecraft into an orbit 880km x 70,000km around the earth. The spacecraft will then undertake a 21-day journey to soft land in Mare Imbrium, a region in the North-Western hemisphere of the Moon.

After landing, the spacecraft will deploy its payload, including the TeamIndus rover that will traverse 500 metres on the moon's surface to accomplish its objectives.

TeamIndus' rover has been designed and developed in Bengaluru by a 100-person engineering team, including 20 retired Indian space scientists.
 

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India's Moon mission: ISRO to achieve remarkable feat as Chandrayaan 2 tests underway, confirms space agency's chief
According to ISRO, the Chandrayaan 2 will be launched in form of a composite stack into the Earth Parking Orbit (EPO) of 170 X 18,500 km. The GSLV-Mk II will carry the Chandrayaan 2.
New Delhi :

India is all set to achieve yet another feat by launching second Moon mission - Chandrayaan 2 – in 2018, Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) chairman AS Kiran Kumar has said. The Chandrayaan 2 is likely to be launched in the first quarter of 2018, he said.

The ISRO chief announced the development while speaking at the seventh annual convocation of Vels University on Wednesday. He also said that the tests for India’s second moon mission are underway to ensure a controlled landing of Chandrayaan 2 on the surface of the Moon.

"ISRO will develop an engine that will help in the controlled landing on the moon. The mission is currently planned for the first quarter of 2018," he said.

An artificial crater has been developed by the scientists to simulate the surface of the lunar conditions for the landing experiments, said Kumar.

ALSO READ | ISRO begins simulation tests for Chandrayaan-II landing mission

The team is readying the satellite, he said, adding, a series of ground tests are being conducted at the ISRO facility in Mahendragiri, Tirunelveli district, and in Challakere, in Chitradurga district near Bengaluru. "The satellite is also getting ready," he added.

On the Venus mission, he said that talks were still on and the project had not been finalised yet.

ALSO READ | Mangalyaan still going strong, to have course correction: ISRO

About Chandrayaan 2 mission:

Chandrayaan 2 consists of an Orbiter, Lander and Rover configuration. It is an advanced version of the Chandrayaan-1 mission.

According to ISRO, the Chandrayaan 2 will be launched in form of a composite stack into the Earth Parking Orbit (EPO) of 170 X 18,500 km. The GSLV-Mk II will carry the Chandrayaan 2.

The Orbiter with scientific payloads will hover in the orbit around the Moon, while the Lander will make a soft landing on the surface of the Earth’s natural satellite and deploy the Rover.

He said that Chandarayaan-2 "will have controlled descent onto the surface of the moon, for which we have to develop an engine that is throttleable".

The Chandarayaan-1 had only orbited the moon, while the second mission, the ISRO chief says would have a 6ft-long rover which will conduct in situ soil analysis after the soft-landing on the moon's surface.

The Indian space agency had scripted history on February 15, 2017 by launching a record number of 104 satellites in a single mission.

Scientists at the Satish Dhawan Space Centre at Sriharikota are currently preparing the launch of a Saarc satellite on board GSLV MK-II by March-end and the first developmental flight of GSLV MK-III in April.
Read the article. artificial craters are develop for simulation. ISRO has a lots of work to do including new facilities, simulation and experimentation. Even launch vehicle is not ready and still ISRO wants to do all this in one year. Which space agency in the world has guts to do this except ISRO.
 

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Sky and Space Global signs new deal ahead of nano-satellite launch
Sky and Space is preparing to deploy nano-satellites in Q2 2017.

Nano-satellites to be launched aboard Indian rocket
Sky and Space Global (ASX:SAS) has signed a non-binding agreement with Globalsat Group LLC to provide Sky and Space’s satellite services to Globalsat’s end-users in South and Latin America.
Globalsat is a provider of mobile satellite services, with a strong local presence across major markets in South and Latin America.
Sky and Space is preparing to deploy nano-satellites in orbit to provide global communication infrastructure and services to the telecommunications and other industries.
The company is set to imminently launch its 3 Diamonds nano-satellites aboard the Indian Space Research Organisation’s (ISRO) Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV) in Q2 2017.
Following the successful demonstration of the 3 Diamonds, Sky and Space intends to launch an equatorial constellation of up to 200 nano-satellites from mid-2018.
A key plank of the agreement with Globalsat is to use the bandwidth provided by Sky and Space’s narrow-band satellite communication services to Globalsat’s end-users.
Globalsat provides satellite telecommunications solutions for thousands of customers in multiple vertical sectors such as energy, government, defence, media, mining and banking.
Under the terms of the agreement, the parties will first work towards performing a commercial demonstration of the services during H2 2017 in South and Latin America.
The agreement to utilise the bandwidth provided by the nano-satellites is aimed at further de-risking Sky and Space’s 3 Diamonds communications offering.
The company’s share price has more than doubled since the start of 2017, last trading at $0.195.
 

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By The Wire
The Radioisotope Generator Pulsing in ISRO’s Future

The decay of radioactive isotopes, like those of plutonium and americium, drive generators that can power missions to space that run for decades.

The multi-mission radioisotope thermoelectric generator used on the Mars Science Laboratory. It used plutonium-238 as a heat source. Credit: NASA/Wikimedia Commons

Since the 1960s and until today, scores of satellites and probes launched by humans have explored Earth’s planetary neighbours, thousands of stars, the outer limits of the Solar System and the ceaseless wonders within and without. We have consumed the sights they have taken in and, through them, have built a vision of the cosmos as an unending void embedded with beauty, like a pristine glass marble impregnated with crystals frozen in space.

These missions were built, launched and manoeuvred across vast distances by, at their most essential, humanity’s dreams and determination. However, in space, these attributes count only as much as the mission’s engineering components – and never more so than the source of energy.

For the missions that don’t have to go far from Earth, where sunlight is abundant enough, the probes have been powered by solar panels. But human-launched missions have gone much farther – the Voyager 1 probe is just outside the Solar System – and we intend to keep taking more steps that way. In such cases, the preferred source of energy has been the radioisotope thermoelectric generator, or RTG.

Popular examples of probes powered by an RTG include the Cassini orbiter around Saturn, the New Horizon probe to the outer Solar System, the Curiosity rover on Mars and the veteran Voyager probes. There are dozens of other examples as well. In early 2016, it was rumoured that ISRO’s Chandrayaan 2 mission to the Moon would also be powered by an RTG; it has since been clarified that solar panels will do the job.

An RTG, unlike conventional generators we’re used to on Earth, has no moving parts. Instead, it converts the heat emitted by a radioactive material into electricity. RTGs often provide a few hundred watts at best, but this much is sufficient to power multiple spacefaring instruments. For example, the Curiosity rover has an RTG that converts the 2,000 W emitted by the decay of the 4.8 kg of plutonium-238 dioxide at its heart to produce 125 W of electric power. If this efficiency pales in comparison to a steam turbine’s (~45%) – the excess heat from the isotope can always be used to warm the rover when its surroundings become too cold.

The working principle


A description of an RTG according a University of Leicester poster. Credit: California Institute of Technology

Because an RTG has no moving parts and doesn’t require regular maintenance, it is well suited for powering gadgets that can’t be attended to for long durations. Apart from missions to space, the Soviet Union also used RTGs to power a series of lighthouses it set up inside the Arctic Circle during the Cold War. Critics have expressed concern about these installations because of their susceptibility to theft – especially by terrorists looking for the strontium-90 isotope inside – since they are not continuously monitored.

To convert heat, or thermal energy, from the decaying radioactive isotope into electric energy, an RTG draws upon the Seebeck effect, named for Thomas Johann Seebeck, who discovered it in 1821. The effect is a type of thermoelectric effect (the others are the Peltier effect and the Thomson effect) in which an electric current is produced at the junction between two wires of different materials if they are at different temperatures.

This happens because the temperature difference causes electrons in the different materials to flow in different ways. As a result, a voltage is created across the junction that then leads to an electric current. A thermocouple uses such wires meeting each other at multiple points. Since the Seebeck effect works both ways, the thermocouple can be used to produce heat if a voltage is applied – or produce a current if heat is applied. In an RTG, the heat is supplied by radioactive decay.

Like all things about the American space programme, which was the first to use RTGs in X, development of the generators was commissioned by the American military. In 1947, an offshoot of the Manhattan Project that had been involved in building triggers for the plutonium bomb was set up in Ohio. It would later become known as Mound Laboratories. Two of its engineers, John Birden and Ken Jordan, patented the first RTG in 1958-1959 (as a “nuclear powered milliwatt generator”). In 1957, the US Army Signal Corps Research and Development Laboratories approached them for help with picking a suitable radionuclide to use in a thermoelectric generator.

According to a report published by the US Department of Energy in October 1960, this is how Mound went about shortlisting their candidates:

Initial elimination of isotopes as heat sources was made on the basis of half-life. Any isotope which had a half-life of less than 100 days or greater than 100 years was discarded. A few exceptions were made to insure not overlooking a likely isotope. Further eliminations were made of isotopes which (1) were gamma emitters only, (2) had radioactive transitions yielding gamma with energies greater than one million electron volts, (3) had transitions having an occurrence of gamma emission greater than ten per cent with energies over 0.1 million electron volts, (4) had decay schemes which involved daughter elements having any of the preceding gamma characteristics, or (5) had particle energies so slight that it would require more than one per cent conversion efficiency to give a 0.01 watt output. A literature search of the nuclides was conducted to eliminate isotopes which did not have desired nuclear properties.

Better engines, tougher problems

The shortlist had 47 isotopes. Plutonium-238 was among them. The report’s authors wrote that while plutonium-238 was produced in minute quantities as a byproduct in nuclear reactors, “the large amount of enriched uranium fuel used in reactors makes this scheme appear feasible”. Indeed, in February 2015, NASA reportedly had enough Pu-238 on its hands to fuel at least three more missions at Curiosity’s scale. It has since been established that one of those missions will be the Mars 2020 rover. Another could be the Europa Clipper mission slated for the mid-2020s.

But whether or not there will be a shortage, many space agencies have been working on advancing RTGs to make them more powerful and efficient. One such is the Stirling radioisotope generator – SRG.

The Stirling generator as such has been around since the 17th century, went through a period of disuse paralleling the rise of the steam engine and was finally revived in the pre-transistors period of the 20th century. Its working principle is like an internal combustion engine’s – except the Stirling has no internal combustion. That is, its heat source lies outside the engine.

According to Wikipedia, a Stirling generator works by the “cyclic compression and expansion of air or other gas at different temperatures, such that there is a net conversion of heat energy to mechanical work” (see GIF). As a result, it only requires a suitable working fluid – air often works – and two cylinders to be maintained at different temperatures. As with an RTG’s thermocouple, the heat source here is a radioactive isotope.


Credit: Zephyris at the English language Wikipedia, CC BY-SA 3.0

Because the working fluid isn’t being combusted, an SRG can be almost completely noiseless when on. Its other advantage is that, because its heat source is external to the engine itself and not inside it, its moving parts can last for much longer before they will have to be replaced.

NASA had been working on an advanced version of the SRG, using helium as a working fluid, until 2013, when the program was scrapped*. The principal reason? NASA’s budgets for interplanetary missions had been on a steady decline until then, so scrapping work on the advanced SRG freed up over $500 million (Rs 3,300 crore) that the agency could reallocate to keep some missions alive – as well as spared NASA the obligation to accommodate ASRGs on low-cost missions for testing.

This does complicate issues for NASA because, for the same amount of power, a multi-mission RTG uses four-times as much plutonium-238 as an SRG would. On the other hand, because an ASRG has moving parts while a multi-mission RTG doesn’t, missions will have to carry a spare in case the first one flops.

Finally, the US Department of Energy has a limited amount of plutonium-238, although it announced in November 2013 that it would produce more of the isotope from 2020, at 1 kg/year and a total outlay of $200 million. This means it will take a decade to build two more multi-mission RTGs.

Given these facts, how did NASA’s mission profile for the next decade change when it cancelled the ASRG programme?

The generator in our future

Van R. Kane, an ecologist at the University of Washington and a planetary exploration enthusiast, drew up this table in December 2013 based on decadal survey reports published by NASA. That the Saturn probe could ‘probably’ work with solar power is crucial: if it does, then NASA will have more of the isotope than it will need for missions in the next decade. If the Saturn probe will surely need a multi-mission RTG, then the agency will have less than it needs.

Kane further wrote on his blog that the Uranus orbiter (HORUS) wouldn’t be able to fly until the new production run of plutonium-238 had run for a while, and that the missions most impacted would likely be those under NASA’s Discovery umbrella: “The expectation had been that NASA would make at least one pair of ASRGs available for a Discovery mission. Engineers and scientists came up with clever ideas for ASRG-based missions – the comet hopper, a Titan lake lander, an orbiter to revisit Titan and Enceladus, a Uranus flyby and others. With [multi-mission RTGs] now the only option, NASA needs to hoard its supply of Pu-238.”

Unlike NASA – and ISRO, both of which are in countries that have access to domestic plutonium-238 – the European Space Agency (ESA) has to consider alternatives. One of them is americium-241 (one of the shortlisted candidates in the 1960 report).

According to Tim Tinsley, of the UK’s National Nuclear Laboratory, “When nuclear fuel is reprocessed, the plutonium is separated from the uranium and fission products and stored for reuse as fuel in civil nuclear reactors. Nuclear fuel that has been in a civil reactor will contain a range of plutonium isotopes including 241, which has a decay half-life of 14 years to americium-241. The long-term storage of civil-separated plutonium will therefore produce very isotopically pure americium-241 via this beta decay. Like the americium in used nuclear fuel, this americium is also considered by the nuclear industry to be a waste product that needs to be removed before the plutonium can be reused in nuclear fuel.”

Disadvantages: the radiation emitted by plutonium-238 is easier to shield against and its power density (0.5 W/g) is five-times higher. Advantages: americium-241 has a longer half-life, which means its power density decreases slower, and it is produced in a purer form (99.9% v. 80%). Biggest advantage: UK, and Europe, have access better access to americium-241 than to plutonium-238. Future Brexit deals could change this).

A.R. Sundararajan, a retired scientist at the Department of Atomic Energy (DAE), has written that the DAE has the requisite facilities to prepare plutonium-238 for ISRO to use in its own RTGs. It’s only that the need for using such generators hasn’t yet come up. Moreover, ISRO has not officially conceived of missions that would take Indian instruments to places in the Solar System where sunlight is intermittent, weak or unavailable. But it will. The Moon has already been visited and so has Mars. Follow-up missions to these bodies are in the works, as is an orbiter to Venus. Endeavours by other space agencies (e.g. JUNO) have demonstrated that solar panels will work all the way to Jupiter as well.

But once Saturn is in the crosshairs, or even the far side of the Moon, then RTGs and SRGs are the only existing way out (notwithstanding advances in low-light/low-temperature solar cells). The DAE has – or can manufacture – access to plutonium-238. ISRO can either develop the necessary technology indigenously, in which case it has to chalk out a long-term strategy and secure the necessary funding. Tinsley has written that ten years is an apposite period. Alternatively, ISRO could import it from the US under the 123 Agreement, although Sundararajan has said this might not be feasible.

But in every way, radioisotope generators are in our future.
 

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Launch performed in 2017
Feb 15 03:58 UTC - PSLV(XL)-C37 (FLP) - Cartosat-2D + INS-1A + INS-1B + 101 nanosats (Germany, Israel, Kazakhstan, NL, Switzerland, USA)

Tentative launch schedule

2017
April 4 - GSLV Mk II F09 (SLP) - GSAT-9 (aka South Asia Sat)
April 15 - PSLV C38 - Cartosat-2E + 3 Diamonds (Australia) + Venta-1 + Max Valier + 8 cubesats (QB50-PL) + Aalto-1 (Finland)
NET April 30 May 1-16 - GSLV Mk III D1 (SLP) - GSAT-19
NET July - GSLV Mk II - GSAT-6A
H2 - PSLV - IRNSS-1H
H2 - PSLV - IRNSS-1I
December 28 - PSLV - Team Indus Lunar Lander/ Rover + Team Hakuto Rover
piggybacked on PSLV: Microsat, PlanetiQ-1, PlanetiQ-2, InnoSat-2 (Malaysia), CE-SAT1 (Japan), Niusat, IITMSAT, Kepler (PSLV Nov, Canada)

Q2- Ariane 5 - GSAT-11
Q2- Ariane 5 - GSAT-17


2018
Q1 (or December 2017) - GSLV Mk III D2 - GSAT-20
Q1- GSLV Mk II - Chandrayaan-2
March - PSLV - Cartosat-3
July - PSLV - Oceansat-3
Q3 - PSLV - EnMap (Germany)
- GSLV Mk II F12 - GSAT-7A
- GSLV Mk II F10 - GISAT (GEO Imaging SATellite)

piggybacked on PSLV : IMS(Indian Mini Satellite)/Atmos, IMS-1E, IMS-1F, IinuSat, IMS-B, PARIKSHIT, NEMO-AM (FY 2018-19)

2019
March - PSLV - Cartosat-3A
Q2 - PSLV - RISAT-1A
- PSLV XL - Aditiya-1
December or 2020 - PSLV - Oceansat-3A

piggybacked on PSLV: HYSIS

2020
March - PSLV - Cartosat-3B
- PSLV - RISAT-2A
Q2 - PSLV - Resourcesat-3S
Q2 - PSLV - Resourcesat-3
- PSLV? - MOM-2

2021
Q2 - PSLV - Resourcesat-3SA
Q2 - PSLV - Resourcesat-3A
- GSLV MkII - NISAR (NASA-ISRO SAR sat)

2022

Q1 - PSLV - Resourcesat-3B
- GSLV MkII - Insat-3DS

2024
- GSLV MkIII - First manned mission

updated on March 18
Thanks Input~2
 

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PAKISTAN's space research organisation established 8 years before India's ISRO but lacks it's Capabilities in 2017.
We have some points to clear the confusion.
Kno the Reason, why?
Actually, I'm unable to find it. But it is also linked with our pride ISRO
There is no match between ISRO & SUPARCO.. I think we should stop comparing between these two agencies.. there should be some credible invention work done by the Pakistani agency to get into an comparative war cry..
 

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There is no match between ISRO & SUPARCO.. I think we should stop comparing between these two agencies.. there should be some credible invention work done by the Pakistani agency to get into an comparative war cry..
It may depend on criterias set by individuals but reality is that everything is comparable in the world with large or small gaps between both entities.
 

Indx TechStyle

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It may depend on criterias set by individuals but reality is that everything is comparable in the world with large or small gaps between both entities.
Do you know the meaning of de hyphenation?

I will come in inbox with you tonight about this that why we don't want comparisons.
 

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Yes, it was decided from first day to expand to IOR and later global range, posted an year ago.
So how many satellites planned in total for global range??

plus India shouldn't depend on foreign company about the Atomic clock.. this kind of malfunction like in 1A is costing the exchequer..
 

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