Saturday , November 16 2024

Big success of ISRO, now no debris will be left in satellite launch

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PSLV of the Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO) has completed the Zero Orbital Debris Mission. This means that rockets launched by ISRO will no longer spread debris into space. This step is another milestone in the achievements of ISRO. ISRO said the mission was achieved on March 21, when the PSLV Orbital Experimental Module-3 (POEM-3) completed its mission by re-entering the Earth's atmosphere. The space agency said the PSLV-C58/ExpoSat mission left almost zero debris in orbit. According to ISRO, after completing the primary mission of placing all the satellites in their desired orbits, the terminal stage of PSLV has been converted into a 3-axis stabilized platform, POEM-3.

ISRO got another success.

According to ISRO, PSLV is divided into three segments following the main objective of placing the satellite in the desired orbit. It has been named POEM 3. In the first stage, PSLV was raised from a 650 km altitude orbit to a 350 km orbit. This gave me the opportunity to reach the PSLV class early and reach the class early. This reduced the risk of accidents during class changes.

POEM-3 carried 9 different experimental payloads. Various scientific experiments are to be done with it. Of these, 6 payloads have been provided by non-governmental organizations. These payloads were created within a month. However, its price is very high. Therefore ISRO has decided to encourage private participation in this. ISRO has conducted many new experiments in recent months. Recently ISRO's reusable launch vehicle technology was successfully tested. This reusable launch vehicle was named Pushpak.