PSLV-C34
PSLV-C34 Mission type Deployment of 20 satellites . Operator ISRO Website ISRO website Mission duration 26:30 minutes Distance travelled 505 Km
Spacecraft Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle Spacecraft type Launch vehicle Manufacturer ISRO Launch mass 320,000 kilograms (710,000 lb) Payload mass 1,288 kilograms (2,840 lb)
Launch date 09:26:00, 22 June 2016 (2016-06-22T09:26:00 ) (IST ) Rocket PSLV Launch site Satish Dhawan Space Centre Contractor ISRO Deployment date 22 June 2016
Disposal Placed in graveyard orbit Deactivated 22 June 2016
Regime Sun-synchronous orbit
Cartosat-2 satellite (primary) and 19 other satellites from Canada, Germany, India, Indonesia & United States.
HPBW Propellant mass 211,400 kg (466,100 lb) Propellant HTPB based Propellant mass 42,000 kg (93,000 lb) Propellant Liquid UH 25 + N2 O4 Propellant mass 7,600 kg (16,800 lb) Propellant HTPB based Propellant mass 2,500 kg (5,500 lb) Propellant Liquid MMH + MON-3
PSLV-C34 was the 36th mission of the PSLV (Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle) program and 14th mission of PSLV in XL configuration. The PSLV-C34 successfully carried and deployed 20 satellites in the Sun-synchronous orbit . With a launch mass of 320,000 kilograms (710,000 lb) and payload mass of 1,288 kilograms (2,840 lb), the C34 set a new record of deploying the maximum number of satellites by Indian Space Research Organisation in a single mission. The PSLV-C34 carried One Cartosat-2 satellite, SathyabamaSat (satellite from Sathyabama University , Chennai ), Swayam (satellite from College of Engineering, Pune ) & 17 other satellites from United States, Canada, Germany & Indonesia .[ 1] [ 2] [ 3] [ 4] [ 5] [ 6]
Mission parameters
Mass :
Total liftoff weight: 320,000 kilograms (710,000 lb)
Payload weight: 1,288 kilograms (2,840 lb)
Overall height : 44.4 metres (145.7 ft)
Propellant :
Altitude : 526.877 kilometres (327 mi)
Maximum velocity : 7,606.61 metres per second (24,956 ft/s) (recorded at time of Cartosat-2 separation)
Inclination : 97.48°
Period : 26 minutes 30 seconds
Source:[ 7]
Launch
PSLV-C34 was launched from Satish Dhawan Space Centre at 09:26 IST on 22 June 2016. The PSLV carried total 20 satellites including the primary payload Cartosat-2C . Cartosat-2C was placed in low Earth orbit at 9:44 IST. The entire mission lasted 26 minutes and 30 seconds.[ 1] [ 2] [ 3] [ 4] [ 5] [ 6] The PSLV-C34 is a more advanced, expendable version of the rocket used to launch the Indian Mars Orbiter in 2014.[ 8]
Mission milestones
The mission marked:
36th flight of Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle .
14th flight of Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle in XL configuration.
Record number of satellites carried on a single flight by ISRO.
Sources:[ 4] [ 7]
Record launch
On 28 April 2008, by placing 10 satellites on PSLV-C9 (PSLV-CA ), Indian Space Research Organisation created a world record for the highest number of satellites launched in a single mission. This record was broken by NASA in 2013 (by launching 29 satellites) and was further improved by ISRO when they launched 104 satellites. PSLV-C34 launch was the biggest launch (in terms of number of satellites) by ISRO until PSLV-C37 .[ 9] [ 10]
Payload
PSLV-C34 carried and deployed total 20 satellites. Following are the details of the payload.[ 7]
See also
References
1990s 2000s 2010s
PSLV-C15 (12 Jul 2010)
PSLV-C16 (20 Apr 2011)
PSLV-C17 (15 Jul 2011)
PSLV-C18 (12 Oct 2011)
PSLV-C19 (26 Apr 2012)
PSLV-C21 (9 Sep 2012)
PSLV-C20 (25 Feb 2013)
PSLV-C22 (IRNSS-1A , 1 Jul 2013)
PSLV-C25 (Mars Orbiter Mission , 5 Nov 2013)
PSLV-C24 (IRNSS-1B , 4 Apr 2014)
PSLV-C23 (30 Jun 2014)
PSLV-C26 (IRNSS-1C , 16 Oct 2014)
PSLV-C27 (IRNSS-1D , 28 Mar 2015)
PSLV-C28 (DMC-3 , 10 Jul 2015)
PSLV-C30 (28 Sep 2015)
PSLV-C29 (16 Dec 2015)
PSLV-C31 (IRNSS-1E , 20 Jan 2016)
PSLV-C32 (IRNSS-1F , 10 Mar 2016)
PSLV-C33 (IRNSS-1G , 28 Apr 2016)
PSLV-C34 (22 Jun 2016)
PSLV-C35 (SCATSAT-1 , 26 Sep 2016)
PSLV-C36 (Resourcesat-2A , 7 Dec 2016)
PSLV-C37 (15 Feb 2017)
PSLV-C38 (23 Jun 2017)
PSLV-C39 (IRNSS-1H , 31 Aug 2017, failure)
PSLV-C40 (Cartosat-2F , 12 Jan 2018)
PSLV-C41 (IRNSS-1I , 11 Apr 2018)
PSLV-C42 (16 Sep 2018)
PSLV-C43 (HySIS , 29 Nov 2018)
PSLV-C44 (Microsat-R , 24 Jan 2019)
PSLV-C45 (EMISAT , 1 Apr 2019)
PSLV-C46 (RISAT-2B , 22 May 2019)
PSLV-C47 (Cartosat-3 , 27 Nov 2019)
PSLV-C48 (RISAT-2BR1 , 11 Dec 2019)
2020s
PSLV-C49 (EOS-01 , 7 Nov 2020)
PSLV-C50 (CMS-01 , 17 Dec 2020)
PSLV-C51 (Amazônia-1 , 28 Feb 2021)
PSLV-C52 (EOS-04 , 14 Feb 2022)
PSLV-C53 (DS-EO, NeuSAR, Scoob-1, POEM-1 (hosted), 30 Jun 2022)
PSLV-C54 (EOS-06, BhutanSat aka INS-2B, Anand, 26 Nov 2022)
PSLV-C55 (TeLEOS-2, Lumelite-4, POEM-2 (hosted), 22 Apr 2023)
PSLV-C56 (DS-SAR, VELOX-AM, 30 Jul 2023)
PSLV-C57 (Aditya-L1 , 2 Sep 2023)
PSLV-C58 (XPoSat , POEM-3 (hosted), 1 Jan 2024)
PSLV-C59 (PROBA-3 , 5 Dec 2024)
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