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Home > News > India News > Article > SSLVs second developmental flight with three satellites lifts off from Sriharikota

SSLV's second developmental flight with three satellites lifts off from Sriharikota

Updated on: 10 February,2023 09:43 AM IST  |  Sriharikota
PTI |

This was ISRO's maiden mission this year.

SSLV's second developmental flight with three satellites lifts off from Sriharikota

ISRO's Small Satellite Launch Vehicle SSLV-D2 carrying EOS-07, Janus-1 and AzaadiSAT-2 satellites sits on a launch pad ahead of its launch Pic/PTI

ISRO'sLV D2 carrying EOS-07 satellite and two co-passenger payloads lifted off from the spaceport here on Friday. In its second developmental flight,LV D2 carried EOS-07, an earth observation satellite as its main payload and two others--Janus-1 built by US-based Antaris and Chennai-headquartered Space Kidz India's AzaadiSAT-2. This was ISRO's maiden mission this year.


At the end of a six and a half hour countdown, the 34-metre tall rocket lifted off from the Satish Dhawan Space Centre here, even as ISRO has pinned hopes on it to lead the space agency to success in tapping the small satellite launch vehicle market.


Also read: Joshimath sank by 5.4 cm in just 12 days: ISRO report


The maiden flight ofLV on August 7, 2022 was a partial failure due to an orbit anomaly and deviation in the flight path of the rocket. LV caters to the launch of up to 500 kg satellites to low earth orbits on 'launch-on-demand' basis. It provides low-cost access to space, offers low turn-around time and flexibility in accommodating multiple satellites, and demands minimal launch infrastructure.

EOS-07 is a 156.3 kg satellite which has been designed, developed and realised by ISRO. New experiments include mm-Wave Humidity Sounder and Spectrum Monitoring Payload. While, Janus-1 is a 10.2 kg satellite, the 8.7 kg AzaadiSAT-2 is a combined effort of about 750 girl students across India guided by Space Kidz India, Chennai. The mission objective is to inject these satellites in a 450-km circular orbit.

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