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Amazing achievement! Does anyone have any overview of the Indian rocket development?
I mean something similar to this picture:
View attachment 55460
Pics from launch. At 5,805 kg this is also the heaviest payload orbited by an Indian rocket so far.
So ISRO jumped from ASLV rocket with 150kg(LEO) to PSLV rocket with 3.200kg(LEO). That's more than 20x fold increase. Quite Impressive!View attachment 55475
Credit: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/358484374_Materials_for_Indian_Space_Program_An_Overview
Gessler has given an article explaining the progress so far:
A Brief History of Indian Orbital Rockets
NOTE: In this compilation I'm only going to mention orbital-rated launch vehicles, as such any sub-orbital launchers/sounding rockets will not be mentioned. I'm going to divide this into two parts. The first part will cover the history up till this point, the second part will talk about where...defencehub.live
Here is the upcoming roadmap (Update: SSLV has been successfully launched after one failure):
The Future of Indian Orbital Rockets
As a continuation/Part-2 of "A Brief History of Indian Orbital Rockets" (https://defencehub.live/threads/a-brief-history-of-indian-orbital-rockets.8461/), this part covers those programs that are still to come. NOTE: As with the preceding article, I will only be mentioning those programs that...defencehub.live
Particularly modular/unified launch vehicle family coming after GSLV mk3 (now called LVM3):
View attachment 55476
So ISRO jumped from ASLV rocket with 150kg(LEO) to PSLV rocket with 3.200kg(LEO). That's more than 20x fold increase. Quite Impressive!
When and where did it take of?
When and where did it take of?
Did we miss something?
Never seen it before.
What do space planes like the X-37B even do? They don't seem very useful for reuseable satellites launch. So far the US Air Force has used the X-37B for "secret missions". I assumed it was just research but the fact that both China and India are developing thier own means that there must be some practical use for these space planes.For this experiment, it was carried to altitude by a Chinook and dropped, it landed autonomously. This was the Landing Experiment (LEX).
The RLV-TD platform was first tested in 2016, launching on top of a solid rocket booster. That was called the Hypersonic flight experiment (HEX), where the craft glided at hypersonic speeds & performed a controlled splashdown in the sea.
RLV Technology Demonstration Programme - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org
Then the program was de-prioritized and the funding was slashed because the human spaceflight program (Gaganyaan) took priority. Now 7 years later it seems its back on the board as a lot of the work for the Gaganyaan program has already been completed.
In the future, it's intended to become something similar to the X-37B. I covered it in my articles:
A Brief History of Indian Orbital Rockets
NOTE: In this compilation I'm only going to mention orbital-rated launch vehicles, as such any sub-orbital launchers/sounding rockets will not be mentioned. I'm going to divide this into two parts. The first part will cover the history up till this point, the second part will talk about where...defencehub.live
The Future of Indian Orbital Rockets
As a continuation/Part-2 of "A Brief History of Indian Orbital Rockets" (https://defencehub.live/threads/a-brief-history-of-indian-orbital-rockets.8461/), this part covers those programs that are still to come. NOTE: As with the preceding article, I will only be mentioning those programs that...defencehub.live
What do space planes like the X-37B even do? They don't seem very useful for reuseable satellites launch. So far the US Air Force has used the X-37B for "secret missions". I assumed it was just research but the fact that both China and India are developing thier own means that there must be some practical use for these space planes.