ISRO's experiment to re-start PSLV stage-IV a success:Official

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Press Trust of India Thiruvananthapuram
Last Updated : Dec 17 2015 | 6:29 PM IST
Indian Space Research Organisation has successfully reignited the fourth stage of its workhorse Polar rocket during the PSLV-C29 mission after putting in orbit six Singapore satellites, agency officials said here today.
The engine in the upper stage of the PSLV was shut off and re-started after placing the satellites in orbit yesterday, ISRO's Liquid Propulsion Systems Centre (LPSC) Director S Somanath said.
"We tried it for the first time and it was a success," Somnath said, adding that the technique would be useful when launching multiple satellites in different orbits.
The LSPC director was was speaking to reporters on the sidelines of the inauguration of the 23rd national and first international Heat and Mass Transfer Conference (IHMTC 2015), organised by (LPSC).
The PS4 is the uppermost stage of PSLV, comprising two 'Earth storable' liquid engines.
Veteran nuclear scientist Anil Kakodkar, who inaugurated the conference, hailed ISRO for the successful PSLV-C29 mission.
"It's a fantastic technological achievement that so many foreign clients are vying for taking their satellites on board PSLV. It is a great recognition," he said.
The PSLV-C29 injected the six Singapore satellites in orbit completing the exercise in about 21 minutes after it blasted off from the spaceport of Sriharikota, about 110 km from Chennai last evening.
Speaking soon after the launch, an ISRO official had said in Sriharikota that the agency was carrying out the experiment to re-ignite stage four of the rocket for four seconds from 67.25 minutes (after the lift-off).
ISRO director, Space Applications Centre, Tapan Mishra,
in his keynote address, said complex radars to capture high resolution imagery, remote sensing for various applications are some aspects under research and development.
He called on the business community for more private investment in the space sector to help it grow threefold in the next four years.
On the remote sensing capabilities of ISRO, PG Diwakar, deputy director, National Remote Sensing Centre, said some of the new equipment can help urban planners with geospatial related services and stressed the need for commercialisation of these services by the private sector.
P V Venkitakrishnan, deputy director at Vikram Sarabhai Space Centre, said the space industry has huge capital investment and a PPP model would be highly beneficial to achieve even greater heights.
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First Published: Dec 17 2015 | 6:29 PM IST

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