ISRO Successfully Inserts RISAT-2BR1 Satellite Into Orbit, Touches 319 Foreign Satellite Launch Mark

ISRO's radar imaging earth observation satellite RISAT-2BR1 will send images for surveillance, agriculture, forestry, and disaster management.

Advertisement
By Indo-Asian News Service | Updated: 11 December 2019 17:06 IST
Highlights
  • India touched 319 foreign satellite launch mark ever since 1999
  • RISAT-2BR1 will send images for surveillance, agriculture, forestry
  • The satellite camera can look through the clouds and take pictures

One more such satellite RISAT-2BR2 will soon be launched by ISRO

Photo Credit: ISRO

India on Wednesday successfully placed into orbit its latest radar imaging earth observation satellite RISAT-2BR1 and nine foreign satellites from four countries using its PSLV rocket.

In the process, India touched 319 foreign satellite launch mark ever since 1999.

India's latest radar imaging earth observation satellite RISAT-2BR1 now up in the sky will send sharp clarity images for surveillance, agriculture, forestry and disaster management.

Advertisement

The satellite camera can look through the clouds and take pictures.

Advertisement

The Indian space agency officials said they would supply the required images for various agencies. It is for the user agency to decide on the image use.

One more such satellite RISAT-2BR2 will soon be launched by ISRO.

Advertisement

"I am extremely happy to declare that 50th PSLV rocket had injected the RISAT-2BR1 and nine customer satellites into precise orbit," K.Sivan, ISRO Chairman said post launch.

"Alongwith 50th mission of PSLV rocket, the mission marks another milestone for ISRO. This is the 75th rocket launch from Sriharikota," Sivan said.

Advertisement

He said for the last 26 years of PSLV rocket team was led by eminent persons like Srinivasan, former ISRO Chairman Madhavan Nair, R.V.Perumal, Ramakrishnan and others.

Sivan said the PSLV rocket has five variants now. The rocket that first had a capacity to carry 850 kg, now has a carrying capacity of 1.9 ton.

He said the PSLV rocket has lofted a total of 52.7 ton till date and out of that 17 percent consists of customer satellites.

At about 3.25 p.m. the rocket Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle-QL (PSLV-QL) standing around 44.4 metres tall with a one-way ticket hurtled itself towards the skies ferrying 10 satellites.

With the fierce orange flame at its tail brightening up the evening skies, the rocket slowly gathered speed and went up and up enthralling the people at the rocket port while the rocket's engine noise like a rolling thunder adding to the thrill.

Guiding the rocket was the Vikram Processor-1601 designed by Vikram Sarabhai Space Centre (VSSC) and realised by the Chandigarh based Semi-Conductor Laboratory coming under Department of Space.

The Vikram Processor is used for rocket's navigation, guidance and control and also for general processing applications.

It was the 50th flight of PSLV rocket and 75th rocket mission for the Sriharikota rocket port.

Sharing the ride with RISAT-2BR1 were Anine foreign satellites from the USA (four multi-mission Lemur satellites, technology demonstration Tyvak-0129, earth imaging 1HOPSAT), Israel (remote sensing Duchifat-3), Italy (search and rescue Tyvak-0092) and Japan (QPS-SAR - a radar imaging earth observation satellite) for an unknown fee contracted by NewSpace India Ltd, the new commercial arm of ISRO.

Just over 16 minutes into its flight, the rocket first slung RISAT-2BR1 and a minute later the first of the nine customer satellites was ejected.

The launch mission concluded in about 21 minutes when the last of the customer satellites was put into orbit.

With this successful mission, ISRO has put into orbit 319 foreign satellites.

The PSLV-QL is a four stage/engine expendable rocket powered by solid and liquid fuels alternatively. The rocket has four strap-on booster motors to give additional thrust during the initial flight stages.

 

Get your daily dose of tech news, reviews, and insights, in under 80 characters on Gadgets 360 Turbo. Connect with fellow tech lovers on our Forum. Follow us on X, Facebook, WhatsApp, Threads and Google News for instant updates. Catch all the action on our YouTube channel.

Further reading: ISRO, RISAT-2BR1
Advertisement

Related Stories

Popular Mobile Brands
  1. Ray-Ban Meta Gen 2 Glassses Are Now Available in India
  2. Samsung Galaxy S26 vs Galaxy S25: Here Are the Anticipated Upgrades
  3. Vivo X300 Launched in India With MediaTek Dimensity 9500 SoC at This Price
  4. Vivo X300 Review: Pro Power, Pocket Size
  5. Amar Subramanya to Replace John Giannandrea as Apple's VP of AI
  6. Redmi 15C 5G Camera Details Confirmed a Day Ahead of Launch in India
  7. Samsung Galaxy Z TriFold Launched With 10-Inch Display at This Price
  8. Poco C85 5G Teased to Launch in India Soon With These Features
  9. OnePlus Pad Go 2 Visits Geekbench With This Midrange Chipset
  10. Instagram Could Soon Limit the Number of Hashtags Used in a Post
  1. Sony Bank Plans US Dollar Stablecoin to Support Game, Anime Payments by 2026
  2. Amazon’s Rufus AI Chatbot Helps Drive Black Friday Sales and Engagement, Data Shows
  3. Redmi 15C 5G Camera Details Confirmed a Day Ahead of Launch in India: Expected Specifications, Features
  4. Samsung Galaxy S26, Galaxy S26+ Hardware Upgrades Spotted in Leaked Comparison With Galaxy S25 Counterparts
  5. Redmi Note 15 5G Series Price, Battery Capacity and Other Key Features Leaked Ahead of Anticipated Global Debut
  6. Khujechi Toke Raat Berate OTT Release: When and Where to Watch This Bengali Series Online?
  7. Twinless Now Available for Rent on Amazon Prime Video and Apple TV: What You Need to Know
  8. Who Is Amar Subramanya? Indian-Origin Researcher Taking Reigns of Apple’s AI Division
  9. Samsung Galaxy S26 Could Feature Revamped Lock Screen Customisation, 3D Wallpaper Effects, One UI 8.5 Leak Shows
  10. HMD XploraOne Teased to Launch Soon as Kid-Friendly Phone; Specifications Tipped
Gadgets 360 is available in
Download Our Apps
Available in Hindi
© Copyright Red Pixels Ventures Limited 2025. All rights reserved.