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This Article is From Nov 14, 2018

ISRO Lines Up 10 Missions Before January 2019 After Satellite Launch

GSAT-29 satellite carries important payloads in Ka and Ku band and it is going to serve the remote places of India.

ISRO Lines Up 10 Missions Before January 2019 After Satellite Launch
GSAT-29 project director K Pankaj Damodar said, the launch will help bridge the "digital divide"
Sriharikota:

ISRO has chalked out hectic plans ahead of the new year with the space agency lining up 10 missions before January 2019, the space agency's chief K Sivan said Wednesday.

Following the missions, Mr Sivan said, in January next, ISRO would launch the Chandrayaan-II mission (lunar lander) which will be the first operational mission of the GSLV-Mk III-vehicle.

Addressing reporters after the successful launch of the second developmental flight GSLV-MkIII-D2 carrying communication satellite GSAT-29, he said, "we have to achieve 10 missions before January."

"That is six satellite missions as well as four launch vehicle missions. Definitely, the task in front of us is very huge," he said.

According to him, after Wednesday's flight, the heaviest launcher of India has completed its development flights and is entering into the operational group of launchers of ISRO, that is along with the PSLV (polar satellite launch vehicle) and GSLV.

GSAT-29 satellite carries important payloads in Ka and Ku band and it is going to serve the remote places of India especially Jammu and Kashmir as well as North East under the 'Digital India' programme, Mr Sivan said.

Apart from the Ku band communication payload, he said, the satellite also has optical communication payload as well as high resolution camera.

"This advanced payload is really going to make a technological breakthrough in the GSAT satellite series in future," he said.

According to ISRO scientists, the Master Control Facility at Hassan has assumed control of the GSAT-29 satellite.

"In the coming days, three orbit raising manoeuvres will be executed to position the satellite in geostationary orbit at its designated location," an official said.

While the Geo High Resolution camera will carry out high resolution imaging, the optical communication payload will demonstrate data transmission at a very high rate through optical communication link, he said.

GSAT-29 project director K Pankaj Damodar said, the launch will help bridge the "digital divide."

The first successful mission of GSLV MkIII was an experimental sub-orbital flight in 2014. GSLV-Mk III-D1 successfully launched GSAT-19 a high throughput communication satellite on June 5, 2017.

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