India Launches 10 Satellites At Once 201
freakxx writes "India sets a world record after launching 10 satellites in one go using its workhorse, the Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV). All the satellites were put into their respective orbits successfully. It was the core-alone version of the launch vehicle weighing 230 tonnes with a payload of 824 kg in total. Two of the satellites were Indian satellites, while the rest were from different countries. By this launch, the ISRO has proven its credibility and it is going to boost India's image in the attractive multi-billion commercial market of satellite launches. This was the 12th successful launch of the PSLV."
Building a ... Cluster? (Score:3, Funny)
Suddenly, I'm worried I won't have to imagine a Beowolf cluster of satellites...
Sorry.
On the good side... (Score:1, Interesting)
Stay the course, fiscal conservatives! You still haven't hit rock bottom!
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But yah, no one in Washington is even remotely interested in spending money putting much of anything into space, so any superiority we may have left in regards to space travel is pretty much
On the evil side... (Score:2)
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Our undoing will not be because of fiscal conservatism. I consider myself a libertarian war monger. I'd vote for Ron Paul if he was only pro war. That being said I do acknowledge that my military spending beliefs are not fiscally conservative.
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isn't libertarian war-monger a contradiction in terms?
I believe all people should be able to defend themselves, therefore right to bear arms. That in itself is quite libertarian. I believe that nations should be allowed to defend themselves from foreign opposing forces. Even anarchist philosophy supports that, with the caveat that once they make us all anarchists we stop fighting wars. I believe in the ability to go on the offensive against foreigners if necessary. I don't believe this is a far departure from libertarian philosophy.
While I'm all for the ab
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Building a... MIRV? (Score:5, Interesting)
1. India has nukes. (It also sits on huge reserves of Thorium and has breeder reactors, so it can transform them to uranium or eventually plutonium, as needed.)
2. If you can put an object in orbit, you can make it come down wherever you want it to come down. Or use a smaller rocket and/or a heavier load to make them go ballistic instead of orbitting at all. (For reference, the USSR's space program started the other way around. Someone realized that they had build a rocket so powerful to haul nukes, that it could put a small-ish object in orbit.) Rockets are that interchangeable purpose.
3. Inclined/polar orbits? Always good to have for a nuke, if nothing else, to hit a location that's not near the equator. Plus you might want to go extremely inclined to minimize flight time and thus warning time (I think both the USA and the USSR had most of their nukes aimed at each other over the arctic), or to lob them over international waters and avoid pissing off everyone else in their path.
As a bonus: once you can do polar orbits and big payloads, you can use spy sats.
Now I'm not saying India is necessarily aiming to become an ICBM power. Maybe, maybe not. And they're probably not yet ready to willy-wave internationally about it, in any case. But I'm saying I wouldn't be the least surprised if that was at least one factor in funding that space program.
I still remember seeing the news on TV when they had built their first nuke, and the general euphoria. It was waay back, while they were even poorer than today. Arguably that money could have been better invested in industrializing a little faster. But there were people cheering in the streets that they now have a big destructive weapon. I can see a lot of political capital in the implicit "and now we can lob it at anyone too!" message.
Now I'm not singling India out there. I think they're just... humans, like everyone else. And it's a sad thing that we'd rather have a big stick to threaten the neighbours with, than an extra slice of bread.
Re:Building a... MIRV? (Score:4, Informative)
The 690kg CARTOSAT and the 83kg IMS-1 are both remote sensing satellites, equipped with panchromatic (B&W) and Spectral cameras to image earth at visible and infrared frequencies. Many, if not all, indian satellites are for remote sensing/meteorological - because in a country where agriculture is the primary industry, it is paramount to track the movement of rainfall, particularly the seasonal monsoons. These weather predictions are vital for farmers to ensure a good harvest. A good harvest leads to lower food prices - in effect, this launch has a very close relationship to feeding India's poor, contrary to many trolls here.
As an interesting side note, the PSLV will also be used for Chandrayan-1, India's first mission to moon.The focus of India's space program has, thankfully, been always about peaceful purposes while making money on the side by providing a cheap option for launching amateur radio/science project satellites built by students and universities (such as the other 8 in this launch). More info about the launch here [isro.org].
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Here's a funny thought: 1. India has nukes. (It also sits on huge reserves of Thorium and has breeder reactors, so it can transform them to uranium or eventually plutonium, as needed.)
India also has uranium/plutonium for enough nukes. So why bother with the thorium route. Anyway, we are preserving our supply for more *interesting* applications and shopping around for an independent source of uranium for power, courtesy the nuke deal.
2. If you can put an object in orbit, you can make it come down wherever you want it to come down. Or use a smaller rocket and/or a heavier load to make them go ballistic instead of orbitting at all. (For reference, the USSR's space program started the other way around. Someone realized that they had build a rocket so powerful to haul nukes, that it could put a small-ish object in orbit.) Rockets are that interchangeable purpose.
India has a few ballistic missiles... The Agni series is the most prominent of the lot. I believe we are testing 5K range next year. (Beijing at last...) not quite the US yet, but still... Then there is the Surya. This one is almost mythical, but give it
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Good point, especially since Australia is happy to sell India and a lot of other places as much uranium as is desired.
Offtopic even furthur but interesting since thorium was mentioned - the Indian accelerated thorium reactor idea looks like it could deliver most of the old civilian nuclear promises and gets around the fuel quality problems you have if there is high demand for uranium. It's even possible to add other fue
Re:Building a... MIRV? (Score:5, Insightful)
India's guided missile program (Agni) is known to borrow heavily from it's civilian space program - this is true.
However, it's important to note India's proven track record as a non-agressor, which is especially remarkable when you consider that its surrounded by hostile parties in one way or the other.
India's first nuke test was in 1972 [wikipedia.org]. That's 36 years of indigenous nuke capability. In that time, they have been in a constant state of tension with Pakistan (and gone to war once - Kargil), had a prime minister (Rajiv Gandhi) asassinated by the LTTE (Sri Lankan militants), have parts of Kashmir and Arunachal Pradesh (another state of India) occupied by China, have ULFA seperatists operating in Assam (a north east state of India), and have constant tensions at their border with Burma and Bangladesh.
Not once in this time has India used it's military in anything other than a defensive role. If India's neighbours (and indeed the rest of the world, and especially the US) showed that much restraint, the world would be a much better place.
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...and this is precisely the self-laudatory flag-waving we-can-do-no-wrong nationalism that makes you dangerous.
This makes Indians dangerous? Being proud of a track record of non-aggression?
What about the US attacking Iraq without provocation, killing 100,000s of them, displacing them by the millions, and reducing their country to rubble? And then Clinton and McCain beating their chests with self-laudatory flag-waving we-can-do-no-wrong nationalism saying "we have given the Iraqis the wonderful gift of freedom, and now it's time for them to play a bigger role in securing their country?" Get off your high horse dude
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The biggest nuclear threat we as Indians face are from the two neighbors- Pakistan and China (the latter somewhat less so).
India has pretty cordial diplomatic relations with the rest of the world-possibly due to its history of the non aligned movement in the 60s, where it maintained friendly relations with both Western and Eastern bloc powers.
*IF* we wanted to nuke our neighbors, ICBMs would be total overkill. The Agni III [wikipedia.org] miss
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I suspect that the subtle threat of the US invading them makes some countries (Iran, North Korea) all the more inclined to want to have a deterrent.
Leave it to India (Score:5, Funny)
Japan trains in 1991 (Score:3, Interesting)
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I'd imagine that the packed human-condi
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Indeed; the real question is: how many other satellites fell off during launch?
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You beat me to it (^^) (Score:1)
http://www.chilloutzone.de/files/08040701.html
If you could understand what they say in Japanese, it would be more fun. Someone talks to the pushers, '"It must be hard to do this everyday". And the pushers say "OK now, puuuuussh!" "hey a leg is sticking out!"
You're kidding, right? (Score:3, Informative)
http://taz.de/blogs/wp-inst/wp-content/blogs.dir/44/files/2007/02/043%20overcrowded%20train%20India.jpg [taz.de]
Well, sure, they have the cheap launch system. (Score:2, Funny)
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AAUSAT-II (Score:4, Informative)
You can follow the status here:
http://aausatii.space.aau.dk/eng/ [space.aau.dk]
Recommendations (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Recommendations (Score:5, Insightful)
According to the same source, the EU is spending 3.4 billion Euros on this. This is just half of what we're spending on "administration" this year, and considering the other truly worthless crap we are spending money on, having our own GPS system is a pretty good goal in comparison.
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Let's have a count of hands here, how many people think it's more important to fork money to pure goverment pork (literally) rather than developing some high-tech jobs in europe?
Hey! That argument was actually the same as the tired old strawman people trot up wrt India's space program!
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You know, with this satellite they injected a total of 824 Kg into a 625 Km orbit.
Galileo has an orbit with a altitude of 23222Km with 675Kg a satellite. [wikipedia.org]
How could this be used to launch Galileo?
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Finding a Niche (Score:1)
Isn't this supposed to be the century India passes China as the most populous nation on earth? Those folks are going to need jobs.
16 satellite launch ... (Score:5, Informative)
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Also, considering the size of a Cubesat (1 kg, 0.1 cubic meter), you could launch several hundred on any launch vehicle.
I have this picture in my head... (Score:5, Funny)
Then we begin to see the outcome as diminished crops, rampant expansion of the polar ice belts, strange drops in cancer rates from excessive sunlight exposure in bikini clad Caucasian women;... And some strange little guy on the global news service saying something about "the sky is falling; the sky is falling!"...
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Laugh while you can (Score:5, Insightful)
Most of the above posts make fun of India. Well I must say that this record is quite impessive considering all the fuss the ESA made over their launch of two satellites in a row few years ago.
Few things I have noticed the last years:
Sure they still have a long road ahead (poverty, bureaucracy, nationalism, protectionism,akward traditions, etc.) but they are definitely on the right path.
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But as an Indian, I am not so sure about the last item. Theoretically, yes, we are a democratic union of states. Practically, in every election, you will have hard time deciding which candidate has less murders, rapes and extortion changes against his/her name - that too assuming that your name is in the voters' lists, and you will actually be able to vote.
Democracy lives only in the memory. The country has gone to pigs. All the development and pr
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Indeed it will be nice when they give up their traditions for yours -- a veritable turning point.
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they bought Jaguar from Ford few weeks ago.
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I guess India's doing pretty well (Score:1)
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These Satellites Are Weaponized (Score:1, Funny)
as M.I.R.V.s [wikipedia.org].
against the United Gulags of America.
Nuclear Proliferatingly Yours,
George W. Bush [whitehouse.org].
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George W. Bush."
I don't believe it.
Watch out Springfield (Score:4, Funny)
Most of those sats were built by amateurs (Score:4, Informative)
The Delfi-C3 sat is relying on the Amateur Radio operators around the world to help capture telemetry and forward it to their earth station. Pretty cool, in my book.
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From the site [delfic3.nl]:
Meanwhile, U.S. has stagnated... (Score:2)
How terribly sad. Thanks, George Bush.
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How terribly sad. Thanks, George Bush.
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America did indeed even participate in the Russian launch listed above.
This launch also has virtually nothing to do with the Shuttle, which is primarily a manned crew vehicle. Retiring the shuttle is probably a good decision, given that it failed to fulfill its original design goals of being safe, cheap, and easily reusab
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Cheap not so much, the Turn around time wasn't what was predicted either, but still the we normally launch a shuttle every 3 months.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_space_shuttle_missions#Flight_statistics [wikipedia.org]
Name one other space vehicle that comes anywhere close to those statistics. It's not the Soyuz where the shuttles carry twice the personnel, many times the payload, and still have some 30% more launches.
the shuttle isn't cheap but it is also the only lar
Stop insulting (Score:2, Insightful)
You realize that not all of India lives in poverty right? When foreign nations look at US news, they see guns in schools and that becomes their image of the US. When people travel to India/watch the news, they travel to rural areas to look at what life is like. They don't remember the urban cities, they remember the poor citizens walking back and forth from wells to get water.
Ignorance is another reputation the US has. Stop ruining our image, educate yourself before you start stating vacuous comments.
poverty == india , always ?? (Score:1, Insightful)
~~johri.
Iridium (Score:2)
What ever happened to all those plans for "Internet in the sky" with constellations of hundreds of satellites? Pie in the sky? Guess so.
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AMSAT (Score:2)
There's another name for this technology. (Score:1)
If I were Pakistan I'd be very concerned.
Hey Pakistan, China, (Score:2)
I'm just asking.
10? Only 10? (Score:3, Funny)
In related news .... (Score:2)
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Re:Good for India. (Score:5, Funny)
Leave it to a Mac fanboi to make everything into a joke about Vista tech support.
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After having travel led many countries I can find people in rural India may not have electricity, may not have great roads but definitely they are happier than a lot of us folks.
The simplicity of rural life sometime make me wonder whether what we do is really worthwhile.
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Troll. Why not yell at the world too (Score:5, Insightful)
Yet we don't because it is not so PC to remove the many reasons for that hunger. We also do not have the stomach for it (no pun intended) because it would cost us lives to remove the leadership that routinely starves their own populations.
India is coming forward rapidly, by advancing space science they advance all their sciences. They also give their people something to strive for - something they can show children that India is and what they can become. Let alone the fact that satellites provide better weather monitoring , can track crops and movement of animals. The possibilities of helping their own are a hundredfold, let alone what they can do for others.
Oh, before you troll India again I must ask, did you buy food out this week? If so, why? There are lots of poor people who could have used it in rice to feed a family... so why didn't you help? Oh, yeah, thats because its easier to be a forum troll and blame others for not doing instead of doing yourself.
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I like
It's the syndrome of guilt, I can understand that...
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Anything else out of yer a
Re:Good for India. (Score:5, Informative)
2. What better way to improve living conditions than to become a hub for space technology?
3. I think you may be under some misconceptions about the state of Indian rural life as compared to, for example, the state of Mississippi.
If you're not sure that you know what you're talking about, perhaps you should do some research [wikipedia.org]. If you had, you'd be able to say something like:
India has twice the poverty rate of, for example, the U.S., though that has dropped substantially since their independence and is widely seen as a potential model for a rapid exit from third-world status for other nations.
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Wait ... the death penalty sig gives it away. Looks a lot like wierd Texas commune talk to me.
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<sarcasm class='troll-feed'>
It's terrible, isn't it, that all foreign people are starving to death in their billions.
Just as well there aren't any poor people in the USA - and hey, those little adventures in the Middle East have really paid off there, haven't they?
</sarcasm>
In seriousness, there are much better ways to phrase what is, essentially, a valid question.
Re:Good for India. (Score:5, Insightful)
2) High tech stuff like this creates jobs for academics and skilled workers, who'll be part of India's growing middle class. I believe that creating wealth top-down, by having wealth trickle down from an affluent and productive middle class to the poor, works a hell of a lot better than forever "giving that man a fish to eat".
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I can't really think of anytime in history where wealth has been built from the bottom up!
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Sssh! There are Democrats here and it's an election year so they're bound to claim otherwise, as silly as that may be.
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Indians will eventually solve their problems.
R
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Re:Good for India. (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm always amazed by this kind of arrogance towards developing nations. This kind of comment is seen any time there's a post about the OLPC project, for example.
Do you really think it would be productive if the government of India spent its entire time trying to directly alleviate hunger and poverty? Don't you think that encouraging industries that provide high-paying jobs is a good part of a long-term strategy to improve people's lives?
More to the point, did it never occur to you as a (presumably) well-educated, technically-inclined person that education, science and technology were part of the solutions to the developing world's problems, not just a distraction?
-Esme
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Re:Good for India. (Score:4, Insightful)
Every time I read a comment like this, I don't know what to say.
Do you know what is the single biggest thing that has helped poor farmers all across India? Please visit http://www.echoupal.com/ [echoupal.com]
It is a website for small farmers. Even for those farmers who don't have Internet, there are kiosks in villages where volunteers explain them and help them use the website.
Using this, the farmers network and help each other solve problems. Single biggest benefit of this has been spotting and eliminating corrupt middlemen who give unfairly low price to farmers and sell it for high price to traders. This one advantage is worth entire effort behind this initiative.
Unfortunately Western media does not find these stories interesting. They love to show poor hungry children begging for food. Then they get to portray the Western world as the noble minded donor.
The truth is even poor people want to work hard and improve their lifestyle. Information technology, Internet, communication infrastructure, is what will give them a chance. It is absolutely right thing if a poor country with a billion hungry people launches satellites. It is better than a rich country launching wars.
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The reason such cases exist in India and in other countries (middlemen that buy products in very low prices and sell them in very high practices) is because of the lack
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Easy (Score:2)
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âoeFirst they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win.â
I guess India's up to step 2.
Just remember, the technological curve that India's on is a lot sharper than the one the US has had, and the last 8 years of stunting science in the US by the current administration is only going to hurt long-term.
--iamnotayam
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For a while there I thought the world wouldn't end in a fiery apocalypse. Oh well.
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I did... I was hoping that threat was done with.
Does every technological advancement by others have to be thought through the prism of a threat?
If that technological advancement is a weapon it probably should be. It's not like they accidently invented nuclear missles while trying to perfect nuclear power.
But that's not the point... mutually assured destruction and proportionate response doesn't work against a natio