ISRO's LVM3 successfully injects 36 satellites into intended orbits

This is the second dedicated mission for NewSpace India Ltd, the commercial arm of the ISRO

By Newsmeter Network  Published on  26 March 2023 8:21 AM GMT
ISROs LVM3 successfully injects 36 satellites into intended orbits

Sriharikota: The Indian Space Research Organisation's largest LVM3 rocket on Sunday successfully placed 36 internet satellites of UK-based OneWeb group company into intended orbits.

The 43.5-metre tall rocket blasted off at a prefixed time at 9 am on Sunday, from the second launch pad of Satish Dhawan Space Centre here, about 135 kms from Chennai, at the end of a 24.30 hour countdown.

This is the second dedicated mission for NewSpace India Ltd, the commercial arm of the Indian Space Research Organisation. ISRO had signed an agreement with Network Access Associates Ltd, United Kingdom (OneWeb Group Company), for the launch of 72 satellites into Low-Earth orbits (LEO).


The first batch of 36 satellites of OneWeb Group company were launched on October 23, 2022 by ISRO.

OneWeb is a global communication network powered from space, enabling connectivity for governments and businesses. Soon after the take-off, the rocket sequentially deployed the satellites into multiple orbits. While the first set of 16 satellites were injected, it was announced that the remaining satellites would be placed into the intended orbits.

"LVM3-M3/OneWeb India-2 mission is accomplished. All 36 OneWeb Gen-1 Satellites injected into the intended orbits. In its sixth consecutive successful flight, LVM3 carried 5,805 kgs of payload to Low Earth Orbit," the space agency said on its official social media account.

ISRO chairman S Somanath congratulated NSIL, ISRO and OneWeb for the successful launch of the mission.

"As we know today, the first 16 satellites of the series are already placed into the right orbit. And now it has gone into the far south of the Earth, and we will be getting confirmation of the remaining spacecraft separation soon once the onboard storage data is acquired by our Indian ground stations," he said while addressing the scientists and guests at the Mission Control Centre.

The launch was the 18th for OneWeb Group company, while for ISRO, it would be the second mission in 2023 after the successful launch of the SSLV/D2-EOS07 mission undertaken in February.

"Till now, based on the observations, the vehicle has done extremely well. It went up to the right orbit and placed the spacecraft at the right orbit and with minimal disturbances to it." Somanath noted.

Somanath expressed gratitude to NSIL for its support and also for the confidence that the OneWeb India team reposed in ISRO for building this rocket.

Union Minister Jitendra Singh lauded ISRO for Sunday's successful launch. "Proud to be associated with the department of space #ISRO at a time when India under PM @NarendraModi has emerged as the frontline Space Tech nation of the world," he wrote on Twitter.

"Team ISRO adds yet another feather to its much-decorated hat. Successful launch of LVM3-M3/OneWeb India-2 MIssion", the Union Minister of State (independent incharge) Science and Technology said.

OneWeb now has 616 satellites in its fleet, which is more than enough to launch global services later this year. This mission marks OneWeb'sOneWeb's second satellite deployment from India, highlighting the collaboration between the United Kingdom and Indian space industries, the company said.

Across India, OneWeb has aimed to bring secured solutions not only to enterprises but also to towns, villages, municipalities and schools, including the remotest areas in the country, it said.

The first set of satellite separations (comprising four of the 36 satellites) took place around 20 minutes after lift-off, while the remaining were deployed into their respective orbits in phases later. After being placed into the low-earth orbits, the satellites would be divided among 12 planes at an altitude of about 1,200 km from Earth'sEarth's surface. Each plane would be separated at an altitude of 4 km to prevent an inter-plane collision, ISRO said.

This is the sixth flight of LVM3, which was earlier known as the Geosynchronous Satellite Launch Vehicle MkIII (GSLVMkIII) with a cryogenic upper stage. It had five consecutive missions, including the Chandrayaan-2.


Andhra Pradesh chief minister YS Jagan Mohan Reddy congratulated Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) team for the successful launch of the largest rocket LVM3 carrying 36 satellites for Onewebā€™s second venture propelling Indiaā€™s capability on global space technology.


Inputs from PTI

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