PSLV-C3 was the third operational launch and overall sixth mission of the PSLV program. This launch was also the forty-sixth launch by Indian Space Research Organisation since its first mission on 1 January 1962. The vehicle carried three satellites which were deployed in the Sun-synchronous Low Earth orbit.[1][2] The vehicle carried Technology Experiment Satellite (Indian experimental earth observation satellite), BIRD (German earth observation satellite) and PROBA (experimental satellite from Belgium). This was India's and ISRO's second commercial spaceflight. PSLV-C3 was launched at 10:23a.m. IST on 22 October 2001 from Satish Dhawan Space Centre (then called "Sriharikota Range").[3][4][5][6][7][8]
The mission involved placing Technology Experiment Satellite (TES) and Bispectral and Infrared Remote Detection (BIRD) in a 568km circular orbit. It would then place the PRoject for On Board Autonomy (PROBA) satellite in an 568km x 638km elliptical orbit. This demonstrated ISRO capability to launch multiple satellites in multiple orbits. It also earned ISRO $1 million for each satellite.[1][2][9]
Mission parameters
Mass:
Total liftoff weight:294,000 kilograms (648,000lb)
PSLV-C3 carried and deployed total three satellites. Technology Experiment Satellite (TES) was the main payload and BIRD and PROBA were two auxiliary payloads that were mounted on PSLV-C3. In the flight sequence, TES was injected first, followed by BIRD and then PROBA.[1][2]
Heat shield of PSLV displayed at HAL heritage center.
PSLV-C3 was launched at 10:23a.m. IST on 22 October 2001 from Satish Dhawan Space Centre (then called "Sriharikota Launching Range"). The mission was planned with pre-flight prediction of covering overall distance of 586.668 kilometres (365mi). The total flight time was 1658 seconds as PROBA was to be launched into an elliptical orbit after TES and BIRD were launched into a circular orbit.[9] The orbit raise was done using the yaw RCS thrusters in off-modulated mode.[11]
The fourth stage of the PSLV had undergone a break-up event on 19 December 2001, likely caused by an explosion.[12] After the explosion of PSLV-C3, ISRO carried out passivation of the upper stages of the PSLV, from the PSLV-C4 mission onwards.[13] As per ISRO, this event generated 386 debris objects, of which 76 are still in orbit, as on 2021.[14][15]
Portals:
IndiaScienceSpaceSpaceflight
See also
Indian Space Research Organisation
Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle
References
"PSLV-C3". Indian Space Research Organisation. Retrieved 10 Jul 2016.
"PSLV-C3 brochure"(PDF). Indian Space Research Organisation. Retrieved 10 Jul 2016.
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Symbol † indicates past or current rockets that attempted orbital launches but never succeeded (never did or has yet to perform a successful orbital launch)
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