India launches Brazil satellite to monitor Amazon forest |
Indian space agency ISRO`s PSLV-C51 blasted off the agency`s launchpad at the Satish Dhawan Space Centre at Sriharkota, in the morning of 28th February, carrying 19 payloads and ringing in its schedule for 2021. The 53rd Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle launch was exactly as planned, and carried Brazil`s 637-kg Amazonia-1, an optical earth observation satellite, as its primary passenger. This satellite would further strengthen the existing structure by providing remote sensing data to users for monitoring deforestation in the Amazon region and analysis of diversified agriculture across the Brazilian territory. The 18 co-passengers include four of IN-SPACe and 14 of ISRO`s commercial arm, NewSpace India (NSIL). The IN-SPACe satellites include three UNITYsats from a consortium of Indian academic institutes and one Satish Dhawan unit from Space Kidz India, which will study space radiation, among other things. It also includes an engraved picture of Prime Minister Narendra Modi symbolising his Atma Nirbhar initiative and Space privatisation. An e-copy of the Bhagavad Gita, saved on an SD-card, is also part of the package. This is the first dedicated PSLV commercial mission for NSIL, which is undertaking it under a commercial arrangement with a Seattle-based firm Spaceflight. The launch was originally scheduled to carry 20 satellites besides Amazonia-1. Two of them were cancelled in the past week due to technical reasons. The ISRO is lining up its geo-imaging satellite GISAT-1 next. The 2,268 kg GISAT-1 is the first state-of-the-art agile earth observation satellite which will be placed in a Geosynchronous Transfer Orbit by GSLV-F10.
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