GSLV to soar into sky with crew capsule in June
India’s huge Geo-synchronous Satellite Launch Vehicle
(GSLV- Mark III) will soar into the sky with a crew capsule from
Sriharikota in June, signalling that the country is getting ready to
send its own astronauts into space. It will be an experimental mission
and it will carry no astronauts. This crew capsule will return to the
earth with parachutes.
It would be identical to the
“final crew capsule in structural and thermo-structural parts,” said S.
Ramakrishnan, Director, Vikram Sarabhai Space Centre,
Thiruvananthapuram. “We will take it beyond the atmosphere, make it
re-enter the earth’s atmosphere, decelerate it and make a soft touchdown
in the Bay of Bengal off the Andaman coast. We will make efforts to
recover it.”
The VSSC Director was speaking to
reporters here after the Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV-C24) put
into orbit India’s second navigation satellite, the Indian Regional
Navigation Satellite System (IRNSS-1B).
Mr.
Ramakrishnan said the Indian Space Research Organisation would evaluate
the structural and thermal protection systems to withstand the re-entry
load, and thermo-dynamic heating.
This crew capsule
will not contain the life-support systems which will be required when
actual astronauts fly in the crew capsule. “We will be measuring the
environment inside the capsule which will give inputs on the validation
of the astronauts’ life-support systems in terms of temperature,
vibration and shock which will be experienced inside the crew capsule.
This will help us in designing the life-support systems when we actually
fly the astronauts into space.”
No astronauts would be aboard the crew capsule in the GSLV-MkIII mission, he stressed.
K. Radhakrishnan, ISRO Chairman, said the June mission would be a passive flight. Its massive cryogenic engine would not fire.
The
GSLV-MkIII was getting assembled at Sriharikota, Dr. Radhakrishnan
said. Its two strap-on motors had arrived at the spaceport. . The
cryogenic stage is getting ready in the ISRO Propulsion Complex at
Mahendragiri, Tamil Nadu.
Dr. Radhakrishnan said the PSLV would put into orbit in June the French SPOT-7 satellite and four other satellites from abroad.
Courtesy with: THE HINDU
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