AnantS
New Member
- Joined
- Jan 10, 2013
- Messages
- 5,890
- Likes
- 15,774
Looks like they are trying to recover the first stage, which currently simply falls off.@pmaitra There are good interview/articles in Frontline mag(links posted in nasaspaceflight) and according to it, the current RLV isgoing to undergo radical changes. A(dvanced)RLV-TD, The winged body is going to be first stage and not last stage. as described by ISRO chairman in the interview.
Will it be to LEO or GEO/GTO? Do you have any details on it?^ And also aid the second stage to reach higher orbit.
it will be LEO coz RLV is desgined for smaller payloads..ISRO want to increase the freq in low earth orbit.. good for future Indian space station mission. and it is said satellite in future will be smaller and efficinet . this shift in space satellite manufacturing came after chinese destroyed one their satellites using missile.. so if target is smaller u cant hit it..Will it be to LEO or GEO/GTO? Do you have any details on it?
peaking of reducing launch costs, another important test is to be conducted soon – of the scramjet engine being developed by ISRO for its own reusable launch vehicle. Though the engine won’t yet power a full-fledged flight in the test, VSSC’s K. Sivan has said that a smaller version of it will be installed on a sounding rocket to get it going at 6-8 times the speed of sound. In a conventional rocket, an engine is supplied with oxygen from a tank that the rocket carries in order to combust the fuel. A scramjet, on the other hand, is a type of engine that sucks in oxygen from the atmosphere itself, and that too at hypersonic velocities. So, as Sivan went on to say: “What we wish to demonstrate is hypersonic ignition and sustainability of combustion at high Mach numbers. We also want to see whether we are getting the expected thrust value.”
The reusable launch vehicle that a scramjet proper will eventually power hasn’t yet been built. On May 23, ISRO experimented with a scaled-down version of the vehicle to check if the heat-resistant tiles installed on it performed as they ought to and if the onboard computer was able to manoeuvre the flight without major errors. In the next test, a date for which hasn’t been announced, ISRO will drop the vehicle from an airplane so the former can execute a runway landing.
A working vehicle is expected to be ready only around 2030. It will be able to lift between 10,000 kg and 20,000 kg to the low-Earth orbit. Apart from a scramjet, the vehicle may be powered by five semi-cryogenic enginesas well as might be made of lighter materials. Altogether, ISRO expects all efforts to culminate with a reduction in launch costs by a factor of 10. It pays to consider this number in context: by 2030, the organisation will face stiffer competition from its peers around the world in terms of lowering the cost of access to space as well as in payload capacity (e.g., Elon Musk expects to land humans on Mars by 2024).
Rajya Sabha hailed ISRO on Monday for successfully flight testing the Re-usable Launch Vehicle-Technology Demonstrator (RLV-TD), India’s first winged aerospace vehicle capable of returning to the Earth after a space flight.
Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) had flight tested the RLV-TD from Satish Dhawan Space Centre in Sriharikota, Andhra Pradesh on May 23.
RelatedThe development of this technology for sending spacecraft and satellites into orbit and returning to the earth’s surface at the intended spot withstanding extreme pressure and heat conditions has added yet another significant milestone in the success story of India’s space programme, Rajya Sabha Chairman Hamid Ansari said.
In yet another achievement, ISRO scripted history by successfully launching 20 satellites together including India’s earth observation Cartosat-2 series satellite from Sriharikota.
“The credit of both these landmark achievements goes to our scientific community working with ISRO,” Ansari said, as members thumped benches to congratulate scientists, engineers and technicians associated with these projects.
Ansari expressed hope that ISRO will continue to scale greater heights and make the country proud.
INDIAN Space Research Organization (ISRO), since its inception in 1972, has been experimenting with various fields associated with space sciences and rocket technologies. The key focus of the organization is to ensure that India derives maximum benefits from its space programs for its socio-economic development. As the country is essentially an agricultural economy, the emphasis of Indian space programs is more towards receiving meteorological inputs, tracking various weather systems from Indian monsoon to movement of tropical storms, getting correct and relevant information for land and water resources management and knowing more about forest and other resources. Also, for all these years, India has been launching satellites for communications purposes and recently established its own regional navigational system.
Apart from focusing on core areas like meteorology, remote sensing, communication and navigation, ISRO focuses on areas with long-term scientific, technological and strategic relevance. To understand more about the planetary system, India has successfully undertaken missions to moon and Mars. Similarly, to know more about galaxies, the country has launched an astronomical satellite. Apart from this, India is keen on developing systems, which would allow reducing the cost for launching satellites, to have the capability to launch satellites on demand and to prepare themselves for human missions to space. In order to develop this capability, India has taken a first step towards developing a Reusable Launch Vehicle (RLV) technology.
On May 23, 2016, ISRO successfully launched the Reusable Launch Vehicle-Technology Demonstrator (RLV-TD). This launch could be considered a step in the direction of launching a winged body, a spacecraft with delta wings, in future. It is the first step towards realizing the dream of developing an indigenous space shuttle. It may take around 10 years more to have a usable and operational space shuttle. The RLV — 6.5 m long — was launched by ISRO using a nine ton Solid Rocket Motor (SRM) which burned slowly for accommodating the vertical lifting of this winged body. It took five years for the team of 600 scientists at the Vikram Sarabhai Space Center in Thiruvananthapuram to build this body that weighed around 1.75 tons. It is to be noted that normal space shuttles are around 55 m long and weigh more than 2,030 tons.
Indian RLV was flown up to 70 km and made to fall in the ocean (land on a virtual runway in the Bay of Bengal) on its return. Theoretically, such vehicles should land on runways and for any fully developed space shuttle, a 5 km long runway is required. ISRO had three main objectives for this RLV launch: to test the characterization of the aero-thermo dynamics of hypersonic flights; to test the autonomous mission management of hypersonic vehicles; and to test the necessary re-entry technology for the vehicles. All these objectives were achieved. During this test, ISRO tested guiding and navigational techniques and collected information that would assist them to design future missions.
ISRO is expected to move in a systematic fashion for actual realization of this idea. They are expected to conduct tests like LEX (Landing Experiment), REX (Return Flight Experiment) and SPEX (Scramjet Propulsion Experiment) in the coming few years. Also, a separate runway, along with a standby runway at a different location, would be required to be built.
Like all other ISRO programs, this one also appears to be well thought of and ISRO would move in a systematic fashion to realize this dream. However, the time period for realization of this program is too long. It may take more than a decade to have an operational RLV available. The question is, can India afford to wait? Today, privatization of space is happening in a big way. There are a few private players who have support of agencies like NASA and European Space Agency, and are making quick inroad in the space sector.
SOURCE: SAUDI GAZETTEThe global demand for launching of satellites is rapidly increasing. ISRO has made remarkable progress in the area and launched 74 satellites on commercial terms for various countries. Now, India is proposing to increase the frequency of the launches by having more Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV) missions. However, this would cater only partially. It is important to have RLV technology in place at the earliest. For this purpose, the Government would be required to increase the budget of ISRO and the organization needs to engage international partners and develop a model for active participation of domestic industry.
http://m.ndtv.com/india-news/isro-to-test-scramjet-engine-on-sunday-1451043Chennai: The Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) successfully conducted scramjet engine test today at Satish Dhawan Space Centre (SDSC) in Sriharikota in Andhra Pradesh around 80 km from Chennai.
Now we will use this Scramjet for our space program as well as for missile program . Great !ISRO Successfully Conducts Scramjet Engine Test Today
http://m.ndtv.com/india-news/isro-to-test-scramjet-engine-on-sunday-1451043
@Akask kumar @rishivashista13 @salute
We already have in missiles.Now we will use this Scramjet for our space program as well as for missile program . Great !
Sent from my Micromax Q380 using Tapatalk
Not released on official website yet. I'll post when released.Please provide more details and video as available to anyone .
Sent from my Micromax Q380 using Tapatalk
भाई , which missile uses Scramjet engine ?We already have in missiles.
Not released on official website yet. I'll post when released.
Maybe, but when it comes to missiles, I would expect it to be under DRDO, not ISRO. Your question was about missile.DRDO and ISRO are working individually on there own Scramjet engines . Is it true ?
Sent from my Micromax Q380 using Tapatalk