Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

(Redirected from PSLV)
Jump to: navigation, search
Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle
PSLV on the launchpad at the Satish Dhawan Space Centre,Sriharikota
PSLV on the launchpad at the Satish Dhawan Space Centre,Sriharikota
Fact sheet
Function Expendable launch vehicle
Manufacturer ISRO
Country of origin India
Size
Height 44 m
Diameter 2.8 m
Mass 294,000 kg
Stages 4
Capacity
Payload to LEO 3,250 kg
Launch History
Status Active
Launch sites Sriharikota
Total launches 11
Successes 9
Failures 1
Partial failures 1
Maiden flight 20 September 1993
Boosters (Stage 0)
No boosters 6
Engines 1 solid
Thrust 502.600 kN
Specific impulse 262 sec
Burn time 44 seconds
Fuel HTPB (solid)
First Stage
Engines 1 solid
Thrust 4,860 kN
Specific impulse 269sec
Burn time 105 seconds
Fuel HTPB (solid)
Second Stage
Engines 1 Vikas
Thrust 725 kN
Specific impulse 293 sec
Burn time 158 seconds
Fuel N2O4/UDMH
Third Stage
Engines 1 solid
Thrust 328 kN
Specific impulse 294 sec
Burn time 83 seconds
Fuel Solid
Fourth Stage
Engines 2 liquid
Thrust 14 kN
Specific impulse 308 sec
Burn time 425 seconds
Fuel MMH/UDMH

The PSLV or Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle is an expendable launch system operated by the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO). It was developed to allow India to launch its Indian Remote Sensing (IRS) satellites into sun synchronous orbits, a service that was, until the advent of the PSLV, commercially viable only from Russia. PSLV can also launch small size satellites into geostationary transfer orbit (GTO).

Contents

The PSLV has four stages using solid and liquid propulsion systems alternately. The first stage is one of the largest solid propellant boosters in the world and carries 138 metric tonnes of Hydroxyl-terminated polybutadiene (HTPB) binded propellant with a diameter of 2.8 m. The motor case is made of maraging steel. The booster develops a maximum thrust of about 4,430 kN. Six strap-on motors, four of which are ignited on the ground, augment the first stage thrust. Each of these solid propellant strap-on motors carries nine metric tonne of HTPB propellant and produces 677 kN thrust. Pitch and yaw control of the PSLV during the thrust phase of the solid motor is achieved by injection of an aqueous solution of strontium perchlorate in the nozzle to constitute Secondary Injection Thrust Vector Control System (SITVC). The injection is stored in two cylindrical aluminum tanks strapped to the solid rocket motor and pressurized with nitrogen. SITVC in two strap-on motors is for roll control augmentation.

The second stage employs the Vikas engine and carries 41.5 metric tonne (40 metric tonne till C-5 mission) of liquid propellant — Unsymmetrical Di-Methyl Hydrazine (UDMH) as fuel and Nitrogen tetroxide (N2O4) as oxidizer. It generates a maximum thrust of 800 kN (724 till C-5 mission). Pitch & yaw control is obtained by hydraulically gimbaled engine (±4°) and two hot gas reaction control for roll.

The third stage uses 7 metric tonne of HTPB-based solid propellant and produces a maximum thrust of 324 kN. It has as Kevlar-polyamide fiber case and a submerged nozzle equipped with a flex-bearing-seal gimbaled nozzle (±2°) thrust-vector engine for pitch & yaw control. For roll control it uses the RCS (Reaction Control System) of fourth stage.

The fourth and the terminal stage of PSLV has a twin engine configuration using liquid propellant. With a propellant loading of 2 metric tonne (Mono-Methyl Hydrazine as fuel + Mixed Oxides of Nitrogen as oxidiser), each of these engines generates a maximum thrust of 7.4 kN. Engine is gimbaled (±3°) for pitch, yaw & roll control and for control during the coast phase uses on-off RCS. PSLV-C4 used a new lightweight carbon composite payload adapter to enables greater GTO payload capability.

PSLV

This variant has four stages using solid and liquid propulsion systems alternately and six strap-on boosters.It currently has capability to launch 1,600 kg to 622 km SSO.

PSLV-CA

This variant uses the core stages without any strap-on boosters.. It currently has capability to launch 1,100 kg to 622 km SSO.[1]The PSLV-C8 launch used a "Core Alone" (CA) launch vehicle.[2]

PSLV-XL

On 29 December 2005, ISRO successfully tested an improved version of the strap-on booster for the PSLV. It will be used for future PSLV flights, including the launches of Chandrayaan-1 and the RISAT Radar Imaging Satellite.[3]. The payload capability for this variant will be 1800 kg compared to 1600 kg for the current one [4].

PSLV-HP

As reported on the website of The New Indian Express newspaper (April 26, 2007), PSLV project director N Narayanamoorthy spoke of another version being planned called the PSLV-HP, standing for ‘high performance.’ It will have strap-ons motors, but the payload capability will be raised to 2000 kg. The HP version will be used to launch a constellation of seven navigation satellites between 2010 and 2012. Among other things, the efficiency of the stage 4 engine will be improved in this version.[5].

Three-stage PSLV

ISRO is also considering the development of a three-stage version of the rocket (with the second stage of the four-stage version removed) which will be capable of placing 500 kg to LEO.[6][7][8]

After some delays, the first launch of the PSLV occurred on 20 September 1993. Although all main engines performed as expected, an altitude control problem was reported in the second and third stages. After this initial setback, ISRO met complete success with the third developmental launch in 1996. Further successful launches followed in 1997, 1999, and 2001.

In September 2002, the 1060 kg KALPANA-1 was launched by PSLV-C4 into GTO. On 17 October 2003, the 1360 kg Earth observing ResourceSat1 was launched by PSLV-C5.

On May 5, 2005, PSLV-C6 launched two satellites into orbit; CARTOSAT-I a stereoscopic Earth observation satellite with cartographic applications, weighing 1560 kg, and HAMSAT providing satellite based radio service for amateur radio operators, weighing 42.5 kg into a high polar orbit (632 x 621 km).

PSLV will continue be the work horse of the ISRO for its launches, especially for LEO satellites and the Chandrayaan Projects. It has undergone several improvements with each subsequent version, especially those involving thrust, efficiency and weight.

PSLV-CA
PSLV-CA

On January 10, 2007, the PSLV-C7 carried four satellites - the 680 kg Indian remote sensing satellite CARTOSAT-2, the 550 kg Space Capsule Recovery Equipment (SRE-1), Indonesia's LAPAN-TUBSAT (60kg) and Argentina's 6kg nanosatellite called NANO PEHUENSAT-1 into orbit.[9]

On April 23, 2007, the PSLV-C8 carried its first commercial satellite, the Agile for the Italian Space Agency as main payload with the Advanced Avionics Module as its secondary payload Successfully[10]. This was ISRO's first purely commercial launch. All launches of foreign satellites before this had been of micro-satellites or light weight satellites piggybacked on the PSLV, with an Indian satellite being the primary payload. The PSLV-C8 was also launched without its regular 6 strap-on boosters. Another first for ISRO was the inclination of 2.5o (equatorial orbit)[11][12], which made launch comparatively riskier than usual.

Vehicle Variant Date of Launch Launch Location Payload Mission Status
D1 PSLV 20 September 1993 Sriharikota IRS 1E Failure; Software error causes vehicle crash in to the Bay of Bengal (700 seconds after take off), Developmental Flight
D2 PSLV 15 October 1994 Sriharikota IRS P2 Success, Developmental Flight
D3 PSLV 21 March 1996 Sriharikota IRS P3 Success, Developmental Flight
C1 PSLV 29 September 1997 Sriharikota IRS 1D Partial Failure; Suboptimal injection of Satellite.
C2 PSLV 26 May 1999 Sriharikota OceanSat 1, DLR-Tubsat, KitSat 3 Success
C3 PSLV 22 October 2001 Sriharikota TES, Proba[2], BIRD Success
C4 PSLV 12 September 2002 Sriharikota METSAT 1 (Kalpana 1) Success; Satellite injected into a GTO.
C5 PSLV 17 October 2003 Sriharikota ResourceSat 1 Success
C6 PSLV 5 May 2005 Sriharikota* CartoSat 1, HAMSAT Success
C7 PSLV 10 January 2007 Sriharikota CartoSat 2, SRE, LAPAN-TUBSAT, PEHUENSAT-1 Success
C8 PSLV-CA 23 April 2007 Sriharikota* AGILE, AAM Success
Planned launches
C9 PSLV January 2008 Sriharikota* OceanSat-2 (TBC), CanX-2, AAU Cubsat-2, Cute 1.7+APD-2, Compass 1, Delfi-C3, Seeds-2 Planned
C10 PSLV-CA? TBD Sriharikota Polaris (Israel) and/or Cartosat-2A Planned
C11? PSLV-XL April 2008 Sriharikota Chandrayaan I Planned

Name Country Date of Launch Weight (kg) Launch Vehicle
DLR-TUBSAT Flag of Germany Germany 26 May 1999 45 PSLV-C2
KITSAT Flag of South Korea South Korea 26 May 1999 110 PSLV-C2
BIRD Flag of Germany Germany 22 October 2001 92 PSLV-C3
PROBA Flag of Belgium Belgium 22 October 2001 94 PSLV-C3
LAPAN-TUBSAT Flag of Indonesia Indonesia 10 January 2007 56 PSLV-C7
PEHUENSAT-1 Flag of Argentina Argentina 10 January 2007 6 PSLV-C7
AGILE Flag of Italy Italy 23 April 2007 352 PSLV-C8

  • The PSLV-C7 used a device called Dual Launch Adapter for the first time to launch four satellites. [13]
  • The PSLV-C7 used for the first time a video imaging system on board to take pictures of the separation of the first three satellites from the fourth stage of rocket. [14]

  • * means Second Launch Pad.

Advanced Search
Included Web Search Engines


Safe Search

close

Top Matching Results

Occasionally Search.com will highlight specialized results that are based on the context of your query. Examples of specialized results include specific links to news, images, or video.

Top Matching Results may highlight information from other Search.com pages, content from the CNET Network of sites, or third party content. The listings are based purely on relevance. Search.com does not receive payment for listings in this section but our partners that provide this data may get paid for listing these products.

Sponsored Links

This section contains paid listings which have been purchased by companies that want to have their sites appear for specific search terms and related content. These listings are administered, sorted and maintained by a third party and are not endorsed by Search.com.

Search Results

Search.com sends your search query to several search engines at one time and integrates the results into one list which has been sorted by relevance using Search.com's proprietary algorithm. You can customize the list of search engines included in your metasearch from the preferences.

The search engines that are used in your metasearch may allow companies to pay to have their Web sites included within the results. To view the Paid Inclusion policy for a specific search engine, please visit their Web site. Search.com does not accept payment or share revenue with any search engine partner for listings in this section.