Everyone in India wants T20 match now a days. No patience left for test match at all.Varoon Shekhar wrote: Otherwise, they could tantalise the pubilc.

Everyone in India wants T20 match now a days. No patience left for test match at all.Varoon Shekhar wrote: Otherwise, they could tantalise the pubilc.
The date theygive is their target date which they want to reach they don't anmnounce dates to tatnalize public.When there is a glitch that takes priority over any date.If yousee how their mission readiness review is done , any one right from the chairman to the sweeper can raise an objection if they see it and it must be checked and addressed if there is a bug. With this they may have more bugs posted but the net errors will be less. Do it in a hurry and you can destroy the launch pad like space X. NASA may have multiple pads etc (but will be a problem even for them) and we have very few pads etc and shoe string budgets. So when they find something that needs to be corrected that takes precedence.Varoon Shekhar wrote:oh definitely! But ISRO sounded so confident and self assured of a by-the-year-end launch, first mentioning it 2 years ago in Dec 2014, then most recently just 2 weeks ago. If they are not certain of a specific launch date- that too after mentioning it several times- perhaps they should withhold announcing a precise month for a mission, and say it could be within say, a 3 month span. Otherwise, they could tantalise the pubilc.
This may not be completely correct both SRM and Sathyabama University are Private Indian UniversitysSSSalvi wrote: Out of these NIUSAT is special because it is the 1st satellite from a Private Indian University viz. Noorul Islam University , ( formerly Noorul Islam College of Engineering ) in Kanyakumari.
It took them 5 years to build the satellite.
There is a trigger to build this satellite : It was decided to make the satellite in the wake of tsunami in 2004 that claimed many lives.
The satellite was handed over recently to ISRO for placing it on the vehicle PSLV C36.
Already the university has received requests form various entities ( like MP and Jharkhand Govt agencies ) for building satellites for them.
What a way to go.
83 in one go?!?SaiK wrote:ISRO Eyes Record With Launch Of 83 Satellites On Single Rocket In Early 2017
nanos
http://www.ndtv.com/india-news/isro-eye ... 17-1586052
all 83s in one single orbit !
q: how will they be spaced between each other?
There is sufficient delay bet each .. 20-25 minutes to launch 83 nos.SaiK wrote: q: how will they be spaced between each other?
As you deploy velocity also change and each of them will be in different orbit. same applies to individual deployment and batch alsoprasannasimha wrote:If you release them with varying time they will stay apart.
India’s space capabilities helped its armed forces acquire actionable intelligence on the terrorist launch pads in Pakistan-occupied Kashmir that were destroyed during the recent surgical strikes by India’s military. After the strikes, the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) highlighted, for the first time, its role in India’s national security. Its leadership declared that the organization will not be found lacking from securing the country’s national interests. Although security is an integral part of the country’s socio-economic development, ISRO previously held reservations against such declarations owing to the unstable political and diplomatic relationship of India with the West, particularly the United States. The changing perceptions of high-end technologies, due to the geopolitical and security circumstances of India, is the driving factor in this change.
The father of India’s space program, Dr. Vikram Sarabhai, renounced such competition, stating space technology in this country should be meant for constructing a modern society with solid economic foundations. Accordingly, ISRO concentrated its resources on developing fleets of communications and remote sensing satellites, enabling telecommunications, weather forecasting, transportation, management and conservation of natural resources and natural disasters, urban planning, and more.
Owing to this idealistic perspective of high-end technologies, advanced spacefaring countries enthusiastically helped lay the foundations for India’s space program. Although the US and the Soviet Union were rivals in space, they contributed to India of space technology. India, for its part, dedicated the country’s first rocket launching station to the United Nations, reaffirming its support to the work of this international organization. India was one of the 18 members that formed an ad-hoc Committee on the Peaceful Uses of Outer Space at the United Nations, which later became permanent. India firmly believes in peaceful uses of outer space and has thus denounced space weaponization. It is one of the leading voices in creating the Outer Space Treaty that banned testing and placing of weapons of mass destruction in outer space or on celestial bodies.
However, the changing regional geopolitics during the 1960s and 1970s kept India from perceiving high-end technologies as purely peaceful. India woke up to the reality of a nuclear China in 1964, with whom it fought a border war just two years earlier. Pakistan remained an irritant with wars erupting in 1965 and 1971, when India was militarily confronted simultaneously on four sides and the US and United Kingdom deploying warships in support of Pakistan. Meanwhile, Henry Kissinger succeeded in opening US-China diplomatic relations facilitated by Pakistan, which concluded as a strategic loss for India.
With its very survival at stake, India went nuclear in 1974 and initiated a guided missile development program in 1983. The missile program benefitted to an extent from the experience of satellite launch vehicle technology being developed at ISRO. As realism entered India’s foreign policy and national security calculus, so did the perception of critical technologies. Sanctions were imposed on ISRO in the aftermath of 1974 nuclear test.
In the 1990s, the US imposed Missile Technology Control Regime sanctions on both India and Russia when they negotiated a contract for India to receive cryogenic engine technology from Russia. Although India argued that this complex technology is inconsistent with the requirements of ballistic missile systems, the sanctions and subsequent nullification of the deal by Russia, giving in to US pressure, led to further deterioration of space cooperation between the US and India. These developments induced a sense of apathy in the political relations as well.
This situation began to change in 2001 when, barely three months after the 9/11 attacks, the Indian Parliament also came under terrorist attack. The sympathy towards each other as victims of terrorism and the desire to fight this global menace opened room for a political dialogue between the US and India. This led to further consolidation of political ties when both the countries began undertaking a series of reciprocal steps in three critical technology areas for building mutual trust and confidence. Civil space cooperation is one of these areas (other two being civil nuclear cooperation and high technology trade), leading to improved ties between the space communities on both sides.
Due to the sensitivity of these developments, India abstains from talking space technology in the context of national security. However, the political bonhomie between the two countries and common struggle against terrorism did create a diplomatic space for India to reverse this custom. In this context, ISRO played a decisive role for India’s security and publicly stated its commitment for the future.
The launch of Radar Imaging Satellite 2 (RISAT-2) in 2009 is perhaps India’s first national security satellite discussed in the public domain. This satellite uses synthetic aperture radar developed by an Israeli company for providing radar images with a resolution of one meter regardless of the time or weather conditions over an area of interest. India obtained this technology from Israel in exchange for launching an Israeli satellite with a similar payload in 2008. The technical specifications and orbital parameters of RISAT-2, coupled with the pace it was built and launched, shows India’s efforts at plugging security vulnerabilities of the country after the 2008 Mumbai terrorist attacks.
Now, India also possesses world-class optical imaging satellites launched under the Cartosat series. Cartosat-1, launched in 2005, has a resolution of 2.5 metres. With the technological advances in this series, the currently operational Cartosat satellites can provide scene-specific images with a resolution better than 60 centimeters, along with the capability to capture one-minute video of the designated areas. It was this capability that notably provided intelligence input to the armed forces planning the recent surgical strikes. The next-generation Cartosat series can provide images with a resolution better than 25 centimeters, enabling India to detect specific objects and movement of personnel on the ground. India is also planning GEO Imaging Satellite that will be placed in the geostationary orbit for acquiring near-real-time images of the entire Indian subcontinent and the Indian Ocean.
In addition to these earth observation satellites, ISRO has also built communications satellites for strategic purposes. GSAT 6, launched in 2015, features an antenna six meters in diameter to provide secure communications for a host of strategic end users. The Indian Navy acquired its first dedicated communications satellite, GSAT 7, in 2013, while the Indian Air Force and the Indian Army are also set to acquire such satellites in the near future.
These satellites simply provide sophisticated intelligence inputs for the decision-makers on the ground for crafting military operations, while striving to prevent the adversaries from eavesdropping on these plans. And, as ISRO has already noted, the discrimination between the good guys and the bad guys completely rests with the users on the ground. However, ISRO is no longer inhibited about highlighting the critical role it plays for securing India’s national interests and security.
Vidya Sagar Reddy is a research assistant in the Nuclear and Space Policy Initiative of the Observer Research Foundation, New Delhi.
All will be forgiven once they launch a rocket successfully. Nobody will care about ISRO's dates - customers (and they are plenty - both domestic and international) will line up with cheque books to book their launch. In fact not just they will not bat an eye-lid on the "missed self-published dates" but they will come and congratulate ISRO.Indranil wrote:Actually, I am with Varoon Shekhar ji on this. It does not reflect well on any organization if you miss your own self-published dates consistently. And it is not a ISRO only thing. It goes for HAL, ADA everybody. Give tentative timelines till you can give out a firm date. Once you give a firm date, stick to it. I love TASL for this. They are always ahead of schedule!
nirav wrote: a poster above wants ISRO to communicate details as to why theres a delay.
Hmm, would you sir also like a ride on the GSLV ? Round maarenge aap ?
They never said December 2016. They have been consistently saying 4th quarter of 2016 (or rather read as the fourth quarter of 2016-17). I always thought that would be Feb-April 2017. But if it is December 2016 or January 2017., what goes my goat?juvva wrote:^They announced the Dec 2016 date and reiterated it many times. If they are not able to meet the date, ISRO should at least communicate the reasons in some detail.
I look at this as an opportunity. We should move up the value chain and start offering end-to-end (incl satellite design and construction and maybe lease) launch services and grab the US satellite industry as well.Gerard wrote:Why America Needs India's Rockets
ISRO doesn't have adequate capacity to build and launch given the shortage of transponders. They're trying to augment it by involving private players, but it will take time.srin wrote:I look at this as an opportunity. We should move up the value chain and start offering end-to-end (incl satellite design and construction and maybe lease) launch services and grab the US satellite industry as well.Gerard wrote:Why America Needs India's Rockets
ISRO Satellite Centre (ISAC), Bengaluru has developed a satellite Bus Bar indigenously along with Indian industry. The Bus Bar makes the successful power distribution in high power satellites with minimum power loss and good thermal performance. This is one of the requirements for the realisation of High Throughput Satellites (HTS), with more than 50 transponders per satellite, where power requirement is greater than 10 kW. Conventional harness for power distribution with twisted pair of wires cannot meet the low power and voltage drop specifications. Therefore, it is prudent to have an efficient and optimised power distribution system. Usage of Bus Bar in place of conventional power harness is noted to be an appropriate option. The main advantages are power and voltage drop reduction, better thermal design, and reduced Electro Magnetic Interference (EMI) compared to wire harnesses.
The development of indigenous materials and processes associated with the Bus Bar also have paved the way for spin-off applications in other subsystems and utilisation for future satellite programme. In addition, the indigenous development has derived the benefits of technology demonstration, technical expertise gain, in-house realisation with adaptable and scalable designs for future application and saving of considerable foreign exchange. Development of insulation materials such as Poly Aryl Ether Ketone (PAEK), 3D printed Ultem and processes such as Micro Arc Oxidation and Epoxy Insulation coating are the new areas proven for space application while evolving this Bus Bar.
The development, realisation and validation of first flight worthy indigenous Bus Bar is accomplished in GSAT-19 spacecraft. However, the specification of the Bus Bar is rated for handling power requirements of 100 A @70 V of HTS. The development of indigenous Bus Bar is multi-disciplinary activity.
The Bus Bar for GSAT-19 spacecraft is configured as 2xI type Bus Bar mounted on the equipment panel of the spacecraft as depicted in the Figures. The two 'I' bars are named live and return bars form the +70V and 0V potentials respectively. The assembly of Bus Bar measures about 54mm x 58mm x700 mm length and weighs about 1.3 kg. The live and return bars are separated by a rigid insulating fixation and four flexible insulating fixations spaced along the length of the bars. The raw bus power is carried on these two 'I' bars vertically separated with a gap allowing space for installation of connectors. The basic conducting material used is Al 6061 alloy having a cross-section dimension of 23 mm x 3 mm, specified for 100 A in vacuum with tolerable temperature rise.
The Bus Bar and its associated components are realised in-house at ISAC Mechanical Fabrication Facilities. Followed this, the Bus Bar is silver plated (12 ± 4 micron thickness) at connector locations for solderability. Subsequently, a Micro Arc Oxidation (MAO) coating of 100±20 micron thickness was performed as a first layer of insulation at Advanced Material Processing Lab. After that, a second layer of Epoxy coating (250 ± 50 micron thickness) is applied. MAO and Epoxy coating ensure a double layer of insulation all over the Bus Bars. Eight numbers of standard high power connectors each having eight contacts are used for connecting Bus Bars to different subsystems like Battery Discharge Regulator (BDR) package, Shunt Regulator, various loads like Core Power Electronics and Fuse Distribution Modules. High power connectors are soldered at Central Electronic Fabrication Facility using SN62 solder containing silver, followed by conformal coating and potting with RTV 3145 compound on exposed connector pins for double layer insulation. Every process, material and fabrication sequences are qualified for space environment by Reliability and Quality Assurance team.
The integrated Bus Bar assembly is successfully tested and qualified for a matrix of validation tests such as:
space qualification testing of all materials and processes,
electrical characterisation for high power performance (high current 150 A and high voltage 140V),
mechanical characterisation tests such as friction tests, curvature tests, and break load tests, etc.,
environmental tests like thermal vacuum test, vibration test, shock test, etc.
The development of indigenous Bus Bar meets the requirements of ongoing programmes and ensures the adaptability for forthcoming high power spacecraft programme of ISRO. Further, ongoing developments of the Bus Bar at the anvil of ISAC include characterisation and implementation of L-Junction for Multiple Bus Bar connection, flexible braids for inter panel connections, validation using straight pin connectors, etc.
The indigenous Bus Bar is replacing conventional harness to cater to the high power requirements of HTS Class of Satellites. The potential of Indian industry is utilised to realise Bus Bars at a remarkably competitive cost. For the first time, indigenous Bus Bars will be carried by GSAT-19 which is scheduled to be launched by GSLV-Mk III from SDSC, SHAR, Sriharikota.
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100A@70V power distribution is impressive and deserves a big kudos. But I have a gripe with the write-up (not the hardware).JTull wrote:Indigenous Bus Bar Development for GSAT-19
ISRO Satellite Centre (ISAC), Bengaluru has developed a satellite Bus Bar indigenously along with Indian industry. The Bus Bar makes the successful power distribution in high power satellites with minimum power loss and good thermal performance. This is one of the requirements for the realisation of High Throughput Satellites (HTS), with more than 50 transponders per satellite, where power requirement is greater than 10 kW. Conventional harness for power distribution with twisted pair of wires cannot meet the low power and voltage drop specifications. Therefore, it is prudent to have an efficient and optimised power distribution system. Usage of Bus Bar in place of conventional power harness is noted to be an appropriate option. The main advantages are power and voltage drop reduction, better thermal design, and reduced Electro Magnetic Interference (EMI) compared to wire harnesses.
The development of indigenous materials and processes associated with the Bus Bar also have paved the way for spin-off applications in other subsystems and utilisation for future satellite programme. In addition, the indigenous development has derived the benefits of technology demonstration, technical expertise gain, in-house realisation with adaptable and scalable designs for future application and saving of considerable foreign exchange. Development of insulation materials such as Poly Aryl Ether Ketone (PAEK), 3D printed Ultem and processes such as Micro Arc Oxidation and Epoxy Insulation coating are the new areas proven for space application while evolving this Bus Bar.
The development, realisation and validation of first flight worthy indigenous Bus Bar is accomplished in GSAT-19 spacecraft. However, the specification of the Bus Bar is rated for handling power requirements of 100 A @70 V of HTS. The development of indigenous Bus Bar is multi-disciplinary activity.
The Bus Bar for GSAT-19 spacecraft is configured as 2xI type Bus Bar mounted on the equipment panel of the spacecraft as depicted in the Figures. The two 'I' bars are named live and return bars form the +70V and 0V potentials respectively. The assembly of Bus Bar measures about 54mm x 58mm x700 mm length and weighs about 1.3 kg. The live and return bars are separated by a rigid insulating fixation and four flexible insulating fixations spaced along the length of the bars. The raw bus power is carried on these two 'I' bars vertically separated with a gap allowing space for installation of connectors. The basic conducting material used is Al 6061 alloy having a cross-section dimension of 23 mm x 3 mm, specified for 100 A in vacuum with tolerable temperature rise.
The Bus Bar and its associated components are realised in-house at ISAC Mechanical Fabrication Facilities. Followed this, the Bus Bar is silver plated (12 ± 4 micron thickness) at connector locations for solderability. Subsequently, a Micro Arc Oxidation (MAO) coating of 100±20 micron thickness was performed as a first layer of insulation at Advanced Material Processing Lab. After that, a second layer of Epoxy coating (250 ± 50 micron thickness) is applied. MAO and Epoxy coating ensure a double layer of insulation all over the Bus Bars. Eight numbers of standard high power connectors each having eight contacts are used for connecting Bus Bars to different subsystems like Battery Discharge Regulator (BDR) package, Shunt Regulator, various loads like Core Power Electronics and Fuse Distribution Modules. High power connectors are soldered at Central Electronic Fabrication Facility using SN62 solder containing silver, followed by conformal coating and potting with RTV 3145 compound on exposed connector pins for double layer insulation. Every process, material and fabrication sequences are qualified for space environment by Reliability and Quality Assurance team.
The integrated Bus Bar assembly is successfully tested and qualified for a matrix of validation tests such as:
space qualification testing of all materials and processes,
electrical characterisation for high power performance (high current 150 A and high voltage 140V),
mechanical characterisation tests such as friction tests, curvature tests, and break load tests, etc.,
environmental tests like thermal vacuum test, vibration test, shock test, etc.
The development of indigenous Bus Bar meets the requirements of ongoing programmes and ensures the adaptability for forthcoming high power spacecraft programme of ISRO. Further, ongoing developments of the Bus Bar at the anvil of ISAC include characterisation and implementation of L-Junction for Multiple Bus Bar connection, flexible braids for inter panel connections, validation using straight pin connectors, etc.
The indigenous Bus Bar is replacing conventional harness to cater to the high power requirements of HTS Class of Satellites. The potential of Indian industry is utilised to realise Bus Bars at a remarkably competitive cost. For the first time, indigenous Bus Bars will be carried by GSAT-19 which is scheduled to be launched by GSLV-Mk III from SDSC, SHAR, Sriharikota.
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Early 70s the development was based on basic components ( Transistors etc. ). India did not have doping facilities so these components were imported and rest ( Basic R L C components, PCBs etc ) were india bred.Question: how much of the equipment mentioned in the article is Indian made?