An Indian astronaut - or a Gaganyatri - will soon travel to the International Space Station (ISS), and a groundbreaking India ...
A recently launched satellite is stuck in space after failing to fire its thrusters, preventing it from reaching its operational orbit.
The NVS-02 satellite lifted off from the Satish Dhawan Space Centre in Sriharikota about 6:23 a.m. IST (0053 GMT) aboard the GSLV-F15 rocket, marking the latest step in India's efforts to expand ...
The Indian Space Research Organisation successfully launched a second-generation navigation satellite, NVS-02, into a geosynchronous transfer orbit us ...
Following the completion of the 27.30 hour countdown, the 50.9 metre tall rocket successfully took off ... The Geosynchronous Satellite Launch Vehicle (GSLV-F15) launch follows its predecessor ...
After the GSLV rocket placed the satellite in the GTO, the solar panels on board the satellite were successfully deployed, and power generation was nominal. Communication with the ground station ...
Aravamudan—one of the first to join India’s fledgling space programme ... hardened team of professionals with scores of successful rocket and satellite launches behind them.
It was crucial for India's own space-based navigation system, easing the country's reliance on the widely used Global Positioning System (GPS). The launch happened on board the GSLV-Mk 2 rocket.
Constellation will provide a position accuracy of better than 20 metres and a timing accuracy of better than 40 nanoseconds over the service area. Isro had launched the first in the constellation NVS- ...
In a momentous stride for India’s space ambitions, the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) successfully launched the GSLV-F15 rocket carrying the NVS-02 satellite on Wednesday from the Satish ...
The NVS-02 cost ₹300 crore; another ₹300 crore was spent on the GSLV rocket. Because of the unopened ... be used for testing the performance of the onboard India-made atomic clock and for ...