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ISRO

Published: 11th January 2018     

India spaces out in 2018 as 28-hour countdown for launch of 31 satellites begins at Sriharikota

The Satellites are not all Indian, and excluding four come from six different countries including South Korea and the US

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A micro satellite in the group will be India's hundredth satellite in space | Rediff

The new year has brought new beginnings, and India isn't one to watch it go by without giving 2018 some space to remember it by. Almost five months after ISROs eight navigational satellite IRNSS-IH was launched, early Thursday brought in a 28-hour countdown as ISRO gears up to launch 31 satellites in a Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV) from its spaceport here, said the space agency.

"The 28-hour countdown began at 5.29 a.m. in the mission control here for the rocket launch at 9.28 a.m. on Friday," said the state-run Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) on its website. The spaceport Sriharikota High Altitude Range (SHAR) is located about 80 km northeast of Chennai off the Bay of Bengal coast.

"The propellant filling operation of fourth stage of PSLV-C40 is under progress," said an update on ISRO's website on Thursday morning. The 31 satellites with a combined weight of 1,323 kg have been integrated with the PSLV-C40 for deploying them in the earth's lower orbit after lift-off.

Of the 31 satellites, three are Indian and 28 are from six countries: Canada, Finland, France, South Korea, UK and the US. The Indian satellites are 710 kg Cartosat-2 series for Earth observation, a 100 kg micro satellite and a five kg nano satellite.

"The micro satellite will be India's 100th satellite in space," ISRO Satellite Centre Director M. Annadurai said on Tuesday. The first space mission in 2018 onboard the PSLV-C40 comes four months after a similar rocket failed to deliver the country's eighth navigation satellite in the earth's lower orbit on August 31, 2017.

(Taken from IANS)

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