The first
developmental flight (GSLV MkIII-D1) of
India's heavy lift launch vehicle GSLV
Mk-III was successfully conducted today
(June 05, 2017) evening from Satish
Dhawan Space Centre SHAR, Sriharikota
with the launch of GSAT-19 satellite.
This was the first orbital mission of
GSLV MkIII which was mainly intended to
evaluate the vehicle performance
including that of its fully indigenous
cryogenic upper stage during the flight.
Weighing 3136 kg at lift-off, GSAT-19 is
the heaviest satellite launched from the
Indian soil.
After a twenty
five and a half hour smooth countdown,
the mission began with the launch of the
640 ton GSLV Mk-III at 5:28 pm IST from
the Second Launch Pad as scheduled with
the ignition of its two S200 solid
strap-on boosters.Following this, the
major phases of the flight occurred as
scheduled. The upper stage of GSLV
MkIII vehicle is a new cryogenic stage
(C25) indigenously configured, designed
and realised by ISRO. The cryogenic
stage used liquid Hydrogen and liquid
Oxygen as propellants with a total
loading of 28 tons. The stage is powered
by a 20 ton thrust cryogenic engine
(CE20) operating on ‘gas generator
cycle’. The performance of the engine
and stage during the mission was as
predicted. About sixteen minutes
after lift-off, GSAT-19 satellite was
successfully placed in orbit.
Soon after its
separation from GSLV, the Master Control
Facility (MCF) at Hassan in Karnataka
assumed control of the satellite.
GSAT-19 is a high throughput
communication
satellite.
In the coming
days, GSAT-19 orbit will be raised from
its present Geosynchronous Transfer
Orbit (GTO) to the final circular
Geostationary Orbit (GSO) by firing the
satellite's Liquid Apogee Motor (LAM) in
stages. During the final phase of
this operation, the solar panels and
antenna reflectors of the satellite will
be deployed. The satellite will be
commissioned into service after its
positioning in the designated slot in
the GSO following in-orbit testing of
its payloads.