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India Launches Advanced Earth-Mapping Satellite and 13 US Cubesats

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India Launches Advanced Earth-Mapping Satellite and 13 US Cubesats

Mike Wall
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An Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) rocket delivered 14 satellites to orbit tonight (Nov. 26), including 12 for U.S. Earth-imaging company Planet and a prototype for Analytical Space.

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© Provided by Space An Indian Space Research Organisation Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle launches the Cartosat-3 satellite and 13 U.S. nanosatellites into orbit from the Satish Dhawan Space Centre in Sriharikota on Nov. 26, 2019.
The ISRO's Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV) launched from Satish Dhawan Space Centre on time at 10:58 p.m. EST (9:28 a.m. on Nov. 27 local Indian time).

About 18 minutes after liftoff, the primary payload — India's Cartosat-3 Earth-observation satellite — deployed as planned from the PSLV's fourth stage. The 13 other spacecraft, all of them tiny cubesats, followed suit over the next 10 minutes.

In Photos: Indian Satellites Soar in PSLV Rocket Launch

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The 3,580-lb. (1,625 kilograms) Cartosat-3 is "a third-generation agile, advanced Earth-observation satellite having high-resolution imaging capability," ISRO officials wrote in the mission's press kit. The spacecraft is designed to study our planet from low-Earth orbit for at least the next five years, gathering data that will aid urban planning and resource and infrastructure development, among other endeavors.

The 12 cubesats from San Francisco-based company Planet are "SuperDoves," the company's latest iteration of tiny Earth-observing spacecraft. The SuperDove line, which includes 26 prototypes that were already in orbit, "features increased spectral bands and major improvements in satellite performance," Planet representatives wrote in a recent blog post.

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© Provided by Space Analytical Space Inc. engineers Sera Evcimen (left) and Weston Marlow assemble the Meshbed satellite at MIT's Engine tech startup space before launch.
Rounding out the payloads lofted tonight is "Meshbed," a cubesat provided by Massachusetts-based company Analytical Space.


Meshbed is "a technology demonstration spacecraft intended to pave the way for users on the ground to gain faster access to satellite data," Analytical Space representatives wrote in a description of the satellite. "The spacecraft features a patented MITRE antenna that could help enable that application, as well as government missions including tactical communications and intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance."

The PSLV flew tonight in the "XL" configuration, meaning it featured six strap-on solid rocket motors. This launch was the 21st PSLV XL mission and the 49th overall for the Indian rocket, which debuted in 1993.

Mike Wall's book about the search for alien life, "Out There" (Grand Central Publishing, 2018; illustrated byKarl Tate), is out now. Follow him on Twitter @michaeldwall. Follow us on Twitter@Spacedotcom orFacebook.
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ISRO has mastered the launch technology. It is like a routine exercise. This is not at all interesting anymore. Many more exciting projects of ISRO are awaiting ahead. Now Japan, US and other European nations wants to ally with ISRO for various space programs.
 
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ISRO has mastered the launch technology. It is like a routine exercise. This is not at all interesting anymore. Many more exciting projects of ISRO are awaiting ahead. Now Japan, US and other European nations wants to ally with ISRO for various space programs.
Agreed, but this is still important for Indian defense applications. This successful launch is also a nice warm up to Aditya L1(Isro's solar mission coming up in May).

Overall another nice little feather in Isro's cap before next year's major missions.
 
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Why no noise? It's world's most powerful optical spy satellite in operation in world. It has multispectral band too along.
But what about Khafee and his PDF exclusives? We can't know for sure if it was successful until he confirms it.
 
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