Ics VVM
Ics VVM
Ics VVM
F
or thousands of years, humans have curiously gazed at the night sky and
dreamt of travelling to space and explore the distant heavenly bodies there.
But that long cherished dream became a reality only after they developed
large rockets capable of carrying satellites and humans to space. After reaching
space, those rockets were powerful enough to make satellites, robotic spacecraft or
spacecraft carrying humans to either circle the earth or proceed towards the other
worlds of our solar system. Besides satisfying the human urge to explore space,
devices launched into space by humans have made our lives here on Earth easier
and safer. Thus, benefits offered by space are truly revolutionary.
Now, let us understand the term ‘space’. When we talk of space research or
space flight today, the word ‘space’ refers to the region which is outside the Earth’s
atmosphere. Today, many scientists agree that space begins at an altitude of about
100km from the Earth’s surface. Thus, all heavenly bodies including the sun, moon,
planets, stars and galaxies are in space. Artificial satellites revolve round the Earth
in space. Humans living in the huge International Space Station today are circling
the Earth in space.
The Beginning
Though India today is considered as one
of the prominent countries conducting
many space activities, the Indian space programme began in a modest way with
the formation of the Indian National Committee on Space Research by the
Government of India in1962. The programme formally began on 21 November 1963
with the launch of a 28-feet long American ‘Nike- Apache’ Sounding Rocket from
Thumba, near Thiruvananthapuram. It carried a small French payload (scientific
instrument) to study the winds in the upper atmosphere. Sounding rockets are
small research rockets that carry instruments to study upper atmosphere and space.
They cannot launch satellites.
Nearly 50 years later, on 9 September 2012, India celebrated its 100th space
mission. That historic mission was performed by India’s Polar Satellite Launch
Vehicle (PSLV-C21) which launched a French and a Japanese satellite, together
weighing 750 kg very accurately into the required orbit. This shows as to how far
India has travelled in space and has attained mastery over space technology.
During the 1960s, India conducted space research mostly through sounding
rockets. But the country also established a ground station to conduct various useful
experiments using communication satellites.
rockets capable of launching large satellites. In the same city is the Liquid Propulsion
Systems Centre (LPSC) that develops liquid rocket engines and the more efficient
and highly complex cryogenic rocket engines.
Bangalore can be called as the space city of India. It has got many space-related
facilities including the ISRO Satellite Centre (ISAC), which builds Indian satellites.
The famous Chandrayaan-1 spacecraft that conclusively discovered water on the
moon was built here. Moreover, the ISRO headquarters and the Department of
Space, which steer the Indian space programme, are in Bangalore. ISRO’s Space
Applications Centre at Ahmedabad develops payloads for satellites.
National Remote Sensing Centre (NRSC) is another important centre of ISRO. It
is situated in Hyderabad and performs the important task of receiving the pictures
sent by India’s remote sensing satellites in the form of radio waves.
The island of Sriharikota in the Bay of Bengal has ISRO’s Satish Dhawan Space
Centre and it is the space port of India. Sriharikota lies about 80 km to the North of
Chennai and lies in the Nellore district of Andhra Pradesh. This is the place from
where 38 Indian built rockets have lifted off (as on April 2013) and have travelled
towards space. It also has facilities to assemble huge satellite launch vehicles as
well as launch and track them.
Aryabhata Satellite
India in Space : A Remarkable Odyssey 75
Aryabhata looked like a large box with many faces (polyhedron). The satellite’s
entire body was covered with solar cells that generated electricity when they were
exposed to sunlight. Aryabhata was built to understand the challenges involved in
building a sophisticated device like a satellite. Nevertheless, it was a scientific
satellite as it carried three scientific instruments to study the sun, distant heavenly
bodies and the Earth’s ionosphere. On 19 April 1975, a Soviet Rocket carried
Aryabhata into a 600 km high orbit. Aryabhata laid a firm foundation to India’s
satellite programme. With this, Indian scientists moved ahead and began building
Bhaskara 1 satellite, which was intended to conduct Earth observations.
Bhaskara 1 was also launched by a Soviet rocket into orbit in June 1979. It carried
a TV camera for taking the pictures of Earth’s surface. Besides, it carried a microwave
radiometer, an instrument to study the Earth. A similar satellite, Bhaskara 2, was
launched in 1981 on another Soviet rocket. The experience gained during the
Bhaskara programme was the foundation stone for the later Indian Remote Sensing
(IRS) satellite programme.
Geosynchronous orbit lies at a height of about 36,000 km from the surface of
the Earth, which of course, is almost one-tenth of the way to moon. A satellite circling
the Earth at that height takes 24 hours to go round the earth once. Since the Earth
also takes 24 hours to spin around its own axis once, the satellite’s speed is
synchronized with the Earth’s spin, hence the name ‘geosynchronous orbit’. A
satellite in such an orbit placed over the equator is called a geostationary satellite.
In the late 1970s and early 80s, ISRO scientists also built the Rohini series of
satellites and gained additional experience
in building satellites. Rohini satellites were
launched by India’s first indigenous launch
vehicle SLV-3.
Satellite as a Catalyst of
Development
In the early 1980s, the power of the artificial
earth satellites to bring about phenomenal
growth in India’s television broadcasting
and telecommunication sectors was
glaringly demonstrated by a satellite called
Indian National Satellite -1B (INSAT-1B). It
was the second satellite in the INSAT-1
series. Because of the failure of its INSAT-18
India in Space : A Remarkable Odyssey 76
predecessor INSAT-1A, Indian space scientists were very much concerned, but
INSAT- 1B brought in a major revolution in India’s telecommunications, television
broadcasting and weather forecasting sectors in a very short and unthinkable time.
INSAT-1B facilitated the rapid expansion of essential telecommunication facilities
like telephone, telegraph and fax across the country. Through INSAT- 1B,
mountainous, inaccessible and isolated regions of the North and Northeast India
as well as island territories of Andamans and Lakshadweep could be accessed
easily.
Chandrayaan-1 made the outside world to look at India with enhanced respect and
galvanized student community within India. It became a prominent milestone not
only in the history of Indian space programme, but in the history of India itself.
Before Chandryaan-1 went to moon, scientists were not certain about the presence
of water on the moon. Thus, it was India’s Chandrayaan-1 which made a major
discovery about the moon. Along with this, scientists were able to sense the height
and depth of various features on the lunar surface. Chandrayaan-1 thus became a
symbol of India’s success in space.
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