Bengalure: India will launch six satellites from Singapore,
including a dedicated 500kg earth observation spacecraft, in mid-December, a
top space official said on Friday.
"The 500kg dedicated satellite (TeLOS-1) will be a
commercial launch for Singapore Technologies Electronics Ltd while five other
smaller satellites are from Singapore universities," Indian space agency's
commercial arm Antix Corporation
Chairman and Managing Director V.S. Hegde announced at Bengalure on 17th
Saturday 2015.
The polar satellite launch vehicle (PSLV), the most reliable
workhorse and trusted rocket of the Indian Space Research and Organisation (Isro), will deploy the satellites
into a near equatorial orbit, inclined 15 degrees lower to the south of
equator.
"As Singapore has a cloudy weather most of the year, the
observatory satellite will be put in a sun-synchronous polar orbit 550km above
the earth so that it could transmit signals round-the-clock, cloud disturbances
notwithstanding," Hegde said on the margins of a defence and aerospace
seminar.
According to the company subsidiary, (Satcom & Sensor
Systems Pte Ltd), its first commercial satellite will carry an electro-optical
camera capable of taking images at ground resolution of one metre.
"The observatory spacecraft will be used disaster and
environment monitoring, maritime safety, urban planning and homeland
security," Hegde noted.
The remote sensing satellite's positioning in the unique near
equatorial orbit also allows its frequent revisits to areas of interest in
equatorial regions at 96-minute intervals, delivering high data availability
and responsiveness.
India will also launch another 900kg dedicated communication
satellite (Aisat) for the German space agency (GLR) in 2016 from its spaceport
at Sriharikota in Andhra Pradesh.
"Of the 23 satellites we have commercially contracted for
launches in the earth's lower orbit from nine developed and developing
countries, 21 smaller, micro and nano type are from Algeria, Canada, Indonesia,
Japan and the US for communication, remote sensing, observational
activities," Hegde added.
With demand for launching 1,500 satellites for various space and
science applications from countries the world over, India is ramping up its
capacity to launch as many of them, in view of its cost competitiveness and
record expertise in sending them in lower orbits using PSLV over the decades.
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