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ISRO’s GSLV-F10 rocket fails to place earth observation satellite into orbit; mission to be rescheduled


ISRO’s GSLV rocket on Thursday failed to inject into orbit the country’s latest earth observation satellite EOS-03 due to a failure to ignite the cryogenic stage of the launch vehicle, prompting the premier space agency to declare the mission could not be achieved as intended.

GSLV-F10 [Image Credit: ISRO]

However, the first and second stages of the rocket had performed normally, the Bengaluru-headquartered Indian Space Research Organisation said.

In a notification, ISRO said, “GSLV-F10 launch took place today at 0543 hrs as scheduled. Performance of first and second stages was normal. However, Cryogenic Upper Stage ignition did not happen due to technical anomaly. The mission could not be accomplished as intended.”

According to ISRO, the cryogenic upper stage ignition was scheduled to take place 4.56 minutes after the lift-off.

A formal announcement was also made at the Mission Control Centre by the range operations director, stating, “performance anomaly observed in the cryogenic stage. The mission could not be accomplished fully.”

The objective of the mission was to provide near real-time imaging of large area regions at frequent intervals, for quick monitoring of natural disasters, episodic events and obtain spectral signatures for agriculture, forestry, water bodies as well as for disaster warning, cyclone monitoring, cloud burst and thunderstorm monitoring.

ISRO Chairman K Sivan said, “(the mission) could not be fully accomplished mainly because there is a technical anomaly observed in the cryogenic stage.”

However, Union Minister Jitendra Singh has said that the mission can be rescheduled again.

ISRO, after facing hurdles caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, resumed its launch operations for the rocket to place the satellite with an objective to provide near real-time imaging of large areas of the country at frequent intervals and quick monitoring of natural disasters.

As the 26-hour countdown concluded on Thursday, the 51.70-metre tall rocket with four stages lifted off majestically at 05.43hrs, leaving behind a trail of thick orange-coloured fumes.

The four-stage rocket was the first to carry a four-metre dia ‘Ogive Payload Fairing’ at the top of the vehicle to accommodate larger payloads.

The rocket was supposed to place the EOS “an agile state-of-the-art satellite into the Geosynchronous Transfer Orbit”, 19 minutes after lift-off.  

Thursday’s unsuccessful attempt to launch the satellite came in the wake of scientists postponing the earlier planned missions.

The satellite, originally titled GISAT-1, weighing 2,268 kg, was slated to be launched on March 5, 2020 but it was postponed a day before the lift-off due to ‘technical reasons’.

The COVID-19-induced lockdown further delayed the mission and once again it was scheduled for a March 28, 2021 launch but a ‘minor issue’ with the satellite forced yet another postponement.

The former ISRO Chairman, Madhavan Nair explained that this is a very complex mission.

“This is a very complex mission. Normally, the cryogenic stage is the most difficult one compared to all other rocket propulsion. This is the eighth launch of the cryogenic stage. The first one was a problem (unsuccessful). Subsequently, all other launches turned in textbook performance. There is a finite possibility of failure with any such complex system. We need not be disappointed. But at the same time, we should go to the root cause (of the failure) and fix it so that we don’t repeat,” Nair told PTI.

Before Thursday’s launch, ISRO had launched Brazil’s earth observation satellite Amazonia-1 and 18 co-passenger satellites in February this year.

Thursday’s mission is the eighth flight with the indigenous cryogenic engine, 14th flight of the GSLV and also marks the 79th launch vehicle mission from Sriharikota.

Previous launches of GSLV rockets include the GSLV-MkIII-M1/Chandrayaan-2 mission in July 2019, while GSLV-F11 successfully placed GSAT-7A in December 2018. An earth observation satellite — EOS-01 — was launched in November 2020 by polar satellite launch vehicle PSLV-C49, ISRO said.

ISRO had made arrangements to watch the launch through its various social media platforms.



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