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#60
by
Steven Pietrobon
on 22 Apr, 2023 09:14
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#61
by
Steven Pietrobon
on 22 Apr, 2023 09:17
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#62
by
Steven Pietrobon
on 22 Apr, 2023 09:20
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#63
by
Steven Pietrobon
on 22 Apr, 2023 09:23
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586.0x586.8 km, 9.9 degree orbit.
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#64
by
FutureSpaceTourist
on 22 Apr, 2023 09:23
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https://twitter.com/isro/status/1649704953961934848PSLV- C55/TeLEOS-2 mission is accomplished successfully.
In a textbook launch, the vehicle placed TeLEOS-2 and LUMELITE-4 satellites precisely into their intended 586 km circular orbit.
@NSIL_India
@PIB_India
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#65
by
Steven Pietrobon
on 22 Apr, 2023 09:27
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Signal received from TeLEOS 2.
Next launches are GSLV, PSLV and LVM-3. Three major missions in next few months.
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#66
by
Steven Pietrobon
on 22 Apr, 2023 09:32
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End of webcast.
Congratulations to ISRO and Singapore for the successful launch!
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#67
by
FutureSpaceTourist
on 22 Apr, 2023 09:34
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Yes congratulations to ISRO and Singapore!
Many thanks to Steven yet again for the excellent live launch coverage.
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#68
by
FutureSpaceTourist
on 22 Apr, 2023 09:44
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#69
by
FutureSpaceTourist
on 22 Apr, 2023 11:08
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#70
by
FutureSpaceTourist
on 22 Apr, 2023 18:16
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#71
by
Skyrocket
on 23 Apr, 2023 01:03
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Interesting - we have a new version of the PSLV-CA rocket, which either feature combined external TVC fluid tanks and roll control pods or have the roll control engine pods omitted.
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#72
by
Steven Pietrobon
on 25 Apr, 2023 07:25
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#73
by
Alter Sachse
on 26 Apr, 2023 08:23
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Was the time of the launch 08:49 UTC ?
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#74
by
ZachS09
on 26 Apr, 2023 12:19
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Was the time of the launch 08:49 UTC?
It was, but for some reason, the launch was pushed back one minute.
I didn’t watch the webcast, hence why I don’t know the answer to the T0 change.
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#75
by
vyoma
on 30 May, 2023 20:44
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Bellatrix Aerospace ARKA-200 Hall effect thruster payload was flown on POEM-2.
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#76
by
vyoma
on 30 May, 2023 20:45
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#77
by
vyoma
on 12 Jul, 2023 18:03
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#78
by
Star One
on 17 Jul, 2023 16:35
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It’s possible a fuel tank from this mission has washed up on a beach in Western Australia.
The Australian Space Agency, which is also part of the investigation, said it was looking into the possibility that it could be a part of a foreign space launch vehicle.
“The agency is working to confirm whether the object could be part of a foreign space launch vehicle that has washed up on shore, and liaising with global counterparts who may be able to provide information about the object,” a spokesperson for the agency said.
“As the origin of the object is unknown, the community should avoid handling or attempting to move the object.”
Experts said that the object could be a part of India’s satellite launch to the moon. It is suspected to be the fuel tank of the Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV) rocket. The latest PSLV mission was the PSLV-55 that was successfully launched in April this year.
https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/australasia/green-head-mystery-object-australia-beach-b2376467.html
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#79
by
Steven Pietrobon
on 22 Jul, 2023 02:40
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This mission went into a low inclination orbit of 10°. Third stage separation occurred at T+586.68 s (9m46.68s) at an altitude of 350 km heading towards space. Not sure where re-entry would be but it would be quite a bit east of India. Someone could work this out from the telemetry that was shown. That's a fairly long trip to Green Head, Western Australia, where the stage was recovered! The previous C54 launch was to a polar orbit, so the third stage probably has an easier path to get to Western Australia.