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Bloomberg: ISRO Challenges Elon Musk, Jeff Bezos With Record Launch

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India Challenges Elon Musk With Record Satellite Launch

India’s space agency will launch a record 22 satellites on a single rocket as it tries to ease a global backlog and demonstrate the ability to compete with commercial spaceflight companies run by billionaires Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos.

Satellites from the U.S., India, Canada and Germany will enter orbit after a scheduled June 20 liftoff from the Sriharikota barrier island along the southeast coast, the agency’s chairman, A.S. Kiran Kumar, said in an interview in Bengaluru. Most of the machines will observe and measure the Earth’s atmosphere, with another from an Indian university helping provide service for amateur radio operators.

The business of putting satellites into space is surging as phone companies, Internet providers, airlines and even carmakers seek bandwidth for communications. The resulting backlog is creating opportunities for Musk and Bezos, who are privatizing what was once a government-only industry by testing reusable rockets to help reduce costs. To keep pace, India is touting its traditionally low-cost program along with achievements such as putting an orbiter around Mars and building a space-shuttle prototype.

Weather, Smartphones

“Unless you keep yourself abreast and look to the future on how to make things better, how to make it more cost-effective, you run the risk of becoming irrelevant,” said Kumar, 64, chairman of the Indian Space Research Organisation. “So you have to take care of these threats.”

The 22 machines being launched next week include an Earth observation satellite to capture light invisible to the naked eye. It is the biggest single launch by India, trailing Russia’s 33 in 2014 and NASA’s 29 the year before.

There were 208 satellites launched in 2014, almost double the amount the year before, as countries such as India and Indonesia try to bring phone services to most of their people for the first time. India is the world’s second-largest smartphone market after China, and that demand is helping fuel what may be a 30 percent increase in liftoffs globally during the next five years.

Need to Double

India has about 35 satellites in orbit for broadcasting, navigation, scientific exploration and weather monitoring, yet it needs double that amount, Kumar said.

“We need to make more launches and we have to build more satellites,” he said on June 9 in an office dotted with scale models of Indian rockets and satellites. “So we are trying to make that happen. We’re reaching a stage where every month we are having a launch.”

The South Asian country sent its first rocket to space in 1963 and its first satellite in 1975. An unmanned mission to the moon that ended in 2009 showed water formation there may be occurring. The Mars probe beat China to the red planet after an almost yearlong voyage.
Orbiting Mars

India last month successfully launched a scale model of a reusable spacecraft, a project that in time could pit the nation against Bezos and Musk in the race to make access to space cheaper and easier. The country also injected a probe into Mars’ atmosphere in 2014 for just $74 million, about 11 percent of the cost of the U.S.’s Maven probe.

-1x-1.jpg

(ISRO chairman Kiran Kumar)

To meet the increasing competition from private industry and other nations, India needs to expand its space program, said Ajey Lele, a New Delhi-based senior fellow at the Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses.

“Right now, India has got only one launch site,” Lele said. “So, it needs to develop another site within India or maybe somewhere else.”

Taking On Challenge

Musk’s Space Exploration Technologies Corp., after three successful landings of the first stage of the Falcon 9 rocket since April, plans to start reusing rockets as soon as September, the billionaire said. Blue Origin LLC has shot off and landed the same rocket three times, and Bezos said low-cost launches are the missing pieces for space travel.

India takes that as a challenge, said Kumar, adding customers today are looking for the most cost-effective launches with short turnaround times.

“If tomorrow, Elon Musk is able to do what he is working on today, he can launch every day, every week, every month,” he said. “And obviously, if he is able to do that, he will capture a large market.”

Kumar, who joined ISRO in 1975 and since has helped design satellites and worked on the Mars mission. India also is collaborating with NASA for the 2020 launch of a radar system to detect small changes in the Earth’s surface, potentially benefiting climate-change studies and helping farmers with crop rotation and flood monitoring, Kumar said.

“If you don’t have a capability, you have to build that capability,” he said. “It is not trying to emulate, but you also have to be relevant.”
 
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'Hard Landing' on moon - check
'Landing straight into the ocean' - check

ISRO is way ahead of SpaceX for sure :rofl:

How is that SUPARCO thingy doing? All well there, I hope? Managed to reach the stratosphere yet?

Second time this week that I am forced to say this:

"Hathi chale bazar..." - You know the rest.
 
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'Hard Landing' on moon - check
'Landing straight into the ocean' - check

ISRO is way ahead of SpaceX for sure :rofl:
Why are you cheering for spacex? ISRO will try and launch 22 satellites with a single vehicle and that's some accomplishment.
We are not challenging or replacing spacex in other space programs as you mentioned above. Thought we want to reach their sometime in future.
 
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How is that SUPARCO thingy doing? All well there, I hope? Managed to reach the stratosphere yet?

Second time this week that I am forced to say this:

"Hathi chale bazar..." - You know the rest.

they have china papa syndrome.

Whenever there is any news regarding India's accomplishment they always come up with "china have done this" "china have done that" sort of argument.

why do they need to do anything on their own when dad is there?


this is suparco's accomplishment
watch from 1:00 onwards
 
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'Hard Landing' on moon - check
'Landing straight into the ocean' - check

ISRO is way ahead of SpaceX for sure :rofl:
Instead of derailing the thread why don't you contribute positively.

Try to encourage Pakistan's brilliant techies to compete and beat India rather than boasting about American SpaceX

And Don't be surprised if ISRO really outclass spaceX in future
 
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When India was about to launch the mom the Pakistanis were like, 'India yeh nahi kar sakta, how dare they, even'. Immediately after the mission success all hell broke loose in the neighborhood.
On a serious note I totally agree with @hinduguy and belive me mate I am waiting eagerly for ISRO to come up with a heavylift capability as reliable as our current capabilities at the earliest. But given the recent developments I dont think it would be a long haul! What do u think?
 
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ISRO is the space agency of India. SpaceX is the private space company of an evil genius in the US.

Try gunning for NASA, the comparison with SpaceX seems disingenuous.

Competition is good though, and if you can light a fire under SpaceX's *ss, and we'll all be better for it. But don't get cocky, you've a long way to go before you can match the capabilities of our private companies, let alone NASA.


And we've got a new toy to look forward to this year:ashamed:.

10904393_10155516746255131_8027909397065944223_o.jpg


Oh, and SpaceX's CSR-3 mission launched 104 satellites in a single mission:partay:.

Arrival_of_CRS-3_Dragon_at_ISS_%28ISS039-E-013475%29.jpg


They just looked like this:D.

2-souvenir-sprite-blink.jpg


And do meet the definition of "satellite".

But honestly, who's keeping score:P.

KickSat_minusX_Full.jpg


Not me, the mission failed:woot:.

You're doing good kid, a real good job. I have a lot of respect for the accomplishments of the Indian Space Program. But you've a long way to go to match us:

https://defence.pk/threads/us-space-program-a-thread.380100/page-18#post-8383356

And we're not done growing either.
 
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ISRO is the space agency of India. SpaceX is the private space company of an evil genius in the US.

Try gunning for NASA, the comparison with SpaceX seems disingenuous.

Competition is good though, and you can light a fire under SpaceX's *ss, and we'll all be better for it. But don't get cocky, you've a long way to go before you can match the capabilities of our private companies, let alone NASA.


And we've got a new toy to look forward to this year:ashamed:.

10904393_10155516746255131_8027909397065944223_o.jpg


Oh, and SpaceX's CSR-3 mission launched 104 satellites in a single mission:partay:.

Arrival_of_CRS-3_Dragon_at_ISS_%28ISS039-E-013475%29.jpg


They just looked like this:D.

2-souvenir-sprite-blink.jpg


And do meet the definition of "satellite".

But honestly, who's keeping score:P.

KickSat_minusX_Full.jpg


Not me, the mission failed:woot:.

You're doing good kid, a real good job. I have a lot of respect for the accomplishments of the Indian Space Program. But you've a long way to go to match us:

https://defence.pk/threads/us-space-program-a-thread.380100/page-18#post-8383356

And we're not done growing either.


Only fools in the Media will compare the US space program with that of India. We have made a name for ourselves, but we are nowhere near the level of NASA
 
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Only fools in the Media will compare the US space program with that of India. We have made a name for ourselves, but we are nowhere near the level of NASA

India like to brag about being number 1 on everything.
 
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We cant compare , especially When US NASA depends on Russian Rockets for their own heavy space launches...
 
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More than the number of satellites launches, I am more excited about Cartosat-2C military satellite with live tracking with better than 0.65 meter resolution...
 
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