-
#1580
by
input~2
on 01 Apr, 2019 08:08
-
Performed launches in 2019
January 24 18:07 UTC- PSLV DL C44 (FLP)- Microsat-R
April 1st 03:57 UTC- PSLV-QL C45 - EMISAT & 28 others
February 5 21:01 UTC- Ariane 5 - GSAT-31 (repl. for Insat-4CR)
Planned launches
2019
mid May 22- PSLV C46 - RISAT-2BR1
June - PSLV C47 - Cartosat-3 + (Nemo-AM?)
July - PSLV - RISAT-2BR1
July 9-16 - GSLV MkIII M1 (SLP) - Chandrayaan-2
August - SSLV Demo 1 - "DefenceSat-A/DefenceSat-B"
Sept to Nov - GSLV - GISAT-1 (GEO Imaging SATellite)
September (tbc) - GSLV MkIII- GSAT-20
October - PSLV - RISAT-2BR2
NET October - SSLV Demo 2
November - GSLV - GISAT-2
- PSLV - HRSAT (3 s/c)
November - PSLV - RISAT-1A
(tbc) - PSLV - IRNSS-1J
piggybacked on PSLV : IMS(Indian Mini Satellite)/Atmos, IMS-1E, IMS-1F, IinuSat, IMS-B, PlanetiQ-1, PlanetiQ-2
June - Ariane 5 - GSAT-30 (repl. for Insat-4A)
2020
- PSLV - Cartosat-3A
February - GSLV - GSAT-32 (repl. for GSAT-6A)
Q1 - PSLV - Oceansat-3A
March - PSLV - Cartosat-3B
Q2 - PSLV - Resourcesat-3S
Q2 - PSLV - Resourcesat-3
mid-year - PSLV - Amazonia-1 (Brazil) & smallsats
- PSLV - EnMap (Germany)
- PSLV XL - Aditya-L1
- GSLV MkIII D3? - GSAT-22
- PSLV - RISAT-2A
- PSLV - Oceansat-3
2021
Q2 - PSLV - Resourcesat-3SA
Q2 - PSLV - Resourcesat-3A
December - GSLV - NISAR (NASA-ISRO SAR sat)
2022
Q1 - PSLV - Resourcesat-3B
- GSLV - Insat-3DS
- GSLV MkIII - GaganYaan (First manned mission)
- PSLV? - MOM-2
updated April 2
updated April 26
updated April 30
updated May 1
-
#1581
by
Salo
on 02 Apr, 2019 20:11
-
-
#1582
by
Salo
on 02 Apr, 2019 20:12
-
-
#1583
by
russianhalo117
on 02 Apr, 2019 23:35
-
2019 Planned launches (expected pad assignments and launch targets)
mid May - PSLV C46 - RISAT-2B (FLP)
June - PSLV C47 - Cartosat-3 + Nemo-AM (SLP)
July - PSLV C48 - RISAT-2BR1 (FLP)
July - GSLV MkIII M1 - Chandrayaan-2 (SLP)
August - SSLV D1 - "DefenceSat-A/DefenceSat-B" (FLP)
September - GSLV F10 - GISAT-1 (SLP)
September - GSLV MkIII M2 - GSAT-20 (SLP)
October - PSLV C49 - RISAT-2BR2 (SLP)
October - SSLV D2 - DRDO payloads (FLP)
November - GSLV F12 - GISAT-2 (SLP)
November - PSLV C50 - RISAT-1A (FLP)
December - PSLV C51 - HRSAT (3 s/c) (FLP)
December - PSLV C52 - IRNSS-1J (SLP)
-
#1584
by
Salo
on 07 Apr, 2019 04:49
-
https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/after-pslv-c45-success-isro-sets-focus-on-next-pslv-for-risat-launch/articleshow/68753149.cmsKOCHI: After the successful launch of PSLV-C45 on Monday morning, Isro centres in Kerala are focused on the next PSLV mission in May for launch of RISAT-2BR 1, a Radar Imaging Satellite for strategic surveillance and then Chandrayaan- 2 moon mission.
...
Now, focus is on by Isro centres for the next PSLV missions and then the GSLV-MK III mission for Chandrayaan -2," ISRO chairman K Sivan told TOI from Sriharikota.
The next window for Chandrayaan-2 mission is by April end, if not, then it will be in June, said an official at Isro.
Vikram Sarabhai Space Centre (VSSC) director S Somanath said, "Tests are on for the PSLV-C46 mission in May for launch of RISAT 2BR 1, a Radar Imaging Satellite for reconnaissanceand strategic surveillance. It will be followed by PSLV-C47 mission to launch earth observation satellite Cartosat-3 in June. The date for launch of Chandrayaan-2 is yet to be finalised".
-
#1585
by
Salo
on 25 Apr, 2019 20:06
-
-
#1586
by
zubenelgenubi
on 26 Apr, 2019 18:57
-
-
#1587
by
Olaf
on 30 Apr, 2019 10:36
-
-
#1588
by
zubenelgenubi
on 01 May, 2019 17:44
-
-
#1589
by
Salo
on 04 May, 2019 05:09
-
https://spacenews.com/loft-orbital-fills-first-condosat-preps-for-quarterly-launches/WASHINGTON — Loft Orbital, a company preparing a constellation to carry payloads for customers who don’t want to operate their own satellites, has filled up its first satellite and booked a January 2020 launch through Spaceflight Industries.
San Francisco-based Loft Orbital will carry five customer payloads on its first mission, designated YAM-2, Alex Greenberg, Loft Orbital co-founder and head of operations, told SpaceNews. Greenberg said the satellite will launch aboard an Indian Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle to low Earth orbit.
-
#1590
by
Salo
on 05 May, 2019 03:59
-
-
#1591
by
Salo
on 12 May, 2019 05:09
-
-
#1592
by
Salo
on 12 May, 2019 05:11
-
-
#1593
by
input~2
on 12 May, 2019 16:31
-
Performed launches in 2019
January 24 18:07 UTC- PSLV DL C44 (FLP)- Microsat-R
April 1st 03:57 UTC- PSLV-QL C45 - EMISAT & 28 others
May 22, 00:00 UTC- PSLV C46 - RISAT-2B
February 5 21:01 UTC- Ariane 5 - GSAT-31 (repl. for Insat-4CR)
Planned launches
2019
July 9-16 15 14 21:21 UTC- GSLV MkIII M1 (SLP) - Chandrayaan-2
June NET July- PSLV C47 - Cartosat-3 + (Nemo-AM?)
NET July - PSLV - RISAT-2BR1
August - SSLV Demo 1 - "DefenceSat-A/DefenceSat-B"
Sept - GSLV - GISAT-1 (GEO Imaging SATellite)
September (tbc) - GSLV MkIII- GSAT-20
October - PSLV - RISAT-2BR2
NET October - SSLV Demo 2
November - GSLV - GISAT-2
- PSLV - HRSAT (3 s/c)
November - PSLV - RISAT-1A
(tbc) - PSLV - IRNSS-1J
piggybacked on PSLV : IMS(Indian Mini Satellite)/Atmos, IMS-1E, IMS-1F, IinuSat, IMS-B, PlanetiQ-1, PlanetiQ-2
June - Ariane 5 - GSAT-30 (repl. for Insat-4A)
2020
- PSLV - Cartosat-3A
February - GSLV - GSAT-32 (repl. for GSAT-6A)
Q1 - PSLV - Oceansat-3A
March - PSLV - Cartosat-3B
Q2 - PSLV - Resourcesat-3S
Q2 - PSLV - Resourcesat-3
mid-year - PSLV - Amazonia-1 (Brazil) & smallsats
- PSLV - EnMap (Germany)
- PSLV XL - Aditya-L1
- GSLV MkIII D3? - GSAT-22
- PSLV - RISAT-2A
- PSLV - Oceansat-3
2021
Q2 - PSLV - Resourcesat-3SA
Q2 - PSLV - Resourcesat-3A
December - GSLV - NISAR (NASA-ISRO SAR sat)
2022
Q1 - PSLV - Resourcesat-3B
- GSLV - Insat-3DS
- GSLV MkIII - GaganYaan (First manned mission)
- PSLV? - MOM-2
Updated May 22
Updated June 9
Updated June 12
-
#1594
by
PM3
on 18 May, 2019 15:24
-
Six years after courting Mars, India has planned seven scientific missions in the next 10 years, including a date with Venus in 2023.
While the spacecraft to Venus will lift off with more than 20 payloads, the next decade will start with interplanetary missions — Xposat to study cosmic radiation in 2020, Aditya L1 to the Sun in 2021, Mars Orbiter Mission-2 in 2022, Lunar Polar Exploration or Chandrayaan-3 in 2024 and Exoworlds, an exploration outside the solar system in 2028.
...
Aditya L1 and Xposat missions have been defined. The rest are in planning stages
https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/after-mars-venus-on-isros-planetary-travel-list/articleshow/69381185.cms(What's that "Exoworlds"? An exoplanet hunter telescope, or a probe to interstellar space?

)
-
#1595
by
A.K.
on 19 May, 2019 02:02
-
Six years after courting Mars, India has planned seven scientific missions in the next 10 years, including a date with Venus in 2023.
While the spacecraft to Venus will lift off with more than 20 payloads, the next decade will start with interplanetary missions — Xposat to study cosmic radiation in 2020, Aditya L1 to the Sun in 2021, Mars Orbiter Mission-2 in 2022, Lunar Polar Exploration or Chandrayaan-3 in 2024 and Exoworlds, an exploration outside the solar system in 2028.
...
Aditya L1 and Xposat missions have been defined. The rest are in planning stages
https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/after-mars-venus-on-isros-planetary-travel-list/articleshow/69381185.cms
(What's that "Exoworlds"? An exoplanet hunter telescope, or a probe to interstellar space?
)
The article is just a random rate. Seriously, when did he have timelines of Chandrayaan-3
An eco solar system mission like Voyager or Pioneer will take 10-15 years to materialize given our current level and it jumping outside solar system will take multiple decades.
-
#1596
by
K210
on 19 May, 2019 02:07
-
Six years after courting Mars, India has planned seven scientific missions in the next 10 years, including a date with Venus in 2023.
While the spacecraft to Venus will lift off with more than 20 payloads, the next decade will start with interplanetary missions — Xposat to study cosmic radiation in 2020, Aditya L1 to the Sun in 2021, Mars Orbiter Mission-2 in 2022, Lunar Polar Exploration or Chandrayaan-3 in 2024 and Exoworlds, an exploration outside the solar system in 2028.
...
Aditya L1 and Xposat missions have been defined. The rest are in planning stages
https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/after-mars-venus-on-isros-planetary-travel-list/articleshow/69381185.cms
(What's that "Exoworlds"? An exoplanet hunter telescope, or a probe to interstellar space?
)
The article is just a random rate. Seriously, when did he have timelines of Chandrayaan-3
An eco solar system mission like Voyager or Pioneer will take 10-15 years to materialize given our current level and it jumping outside solar system will take multiple decades.
ISRO has actually had missions to the outer solar system/intersteller space planned for some time. I believe at one point they had a mission to jupiter planned for 2024. Given the current stage of the GSLV MK-3 program we should have the capability to launch interstellar spacecraft on escape trajectories from 2024-2025 onwards.
-
#1597
by
zubenelgenubi
on 22 May, 2019 15:22
-
Cross-post from the post-successful-launch speeches of
RISAT-2B:
ISRO Chairman and Department of Space Secretary. Satellite has 3.6 m deployable antenna.
Chandrayan 2 between 9 and 16 July. Landing on Moon on 6 September.
Cartosat 3 follows.
Reusable Launch Vehicle second demonstration.
Smallsat Launch Vehicle demonstration mission.
-
#1598
by
zubenelgenubi
on 22 May, 2019 15:51
-
<snip>
Interesting that they changed the launch date of Cartosat-3. It seemed pretty certain it was a June launch, before Chandrayaan. There would be separate teams working on these missions, so it can't be a personnel issue.
Is the launch cadence posted by RH117 up-thread still in play?
Cross-posted and edited:
2019 Planned launches (expected pad assignments and launch targets)
<snip>
July 9-16 - GSLV MkIII M1 - Chandrayaan-2 (SLP)
NET July 16 - PSLV C47 - Cartosat-3 + Nemo-AM (SLP)
July - PSLV C48 - RISAT-2BR1 (FLP)
August - SSLV D1 - "DefenceSat-A/DefenceSat-B" (FLP)
<snip>
Must PSLV C47 launch from SLP--why not from FLP in a parallel launch campaign to
Chandrayaan-2 Is it a
Cartosat-3 payload requirement?
Is the
Chandrayaan-2 launch of such importance that personnel that would otherwise work a different, parallel launch campaign have been reassigned to the
Chandrayaan-2 launch campaign?
Or, is it a matter of "optics"--to give the perception that ISRO's focus is the successful execution of
Chrandrayaan-2, to the exclusion of other, pending launches?
-
#1599
by
Salo
on 22 May, 2019 20:44
-