Home | Recommend Us | Contact us | Make NK your default homepage
VIDEO NEWS
PHOTO NEWS
HOME | ASTROLOGY | CHINESE ASTROLOGY | NUMEROLOGY | RECIPES | SELF HELP | PHOTO GALLERY | YOGA | TRAVEL | EDUCATION | PINCODES | BABY NAMES
NEWS CHANNELS
  • Kerala News
  • India News
  • World News
  • Business India
  • Sports News
  • Cricket News
  • Travel News
  • Health News
  • Technology
  • Literature News
  • Education News
  • NRI News
  • Spec. Features
Entertainment News
  • Bollywood News
  • Hollywood News
  • Malayalam Film
  • Tamil Film
  • Kannada Film
  • Telugu Film
Regional News
  • Andhra Pradesh
  • Gujarat News
  • Karnataka News
  • Maharashtra
  • Orissa News
  • Punjab News
  • Rajasthan News
  • Tamil Nadu
  • West Bengal
  • More India News
Best Of NewKerala

  • Festivals of India
  • Self Help
  • India Travel Maps
  • Temples of India
  • Kerala Info
  • Indian Dance Forms
  • Music of India
  • Bollywood Photos
  • Make Up Lessons
  • Weight Loss Tips
  • Top Destinations
  • World Travelogues

Home > News > business-india-news

India poised to be major player in global satellite manufacturing

By Venkatachari Jagannathan, Chennai, Oct 29 : India can become a major player in the emerging small satellite manufacturing industry. The country's space agency has estimated a market potential of 50 satellites over the next decade, worth around USD 1.5 billion, says a space official.

Keeping this in mind, the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) has already formed a special team to manufacture small satellites.

ISRO will launch two such satellites in 2009 and 2010, both having overseas payloads.

The small satellites are now in demand because its "mass and volume are low, thereby reducing the cost of carriage by rocket. Further, the cost of building the satellite as well as the time required to build it are less," D.V. Raghava Murthy, ISRO's small satellite projects director, told IANS.

"The satellites give a good performance owing to miniaturisation, and simultaneous launch of several satellites is possible if the orbit is same," he added.

ISRO has two small satellite variants - micro and mini.

The micro satellites weigh 100 kg with a payload capacity of 30-40 kg while the mini satellites would weigh 400 kg with a payload capacity of 200 kg.

ISRO is also making communication satellites - INSAT series. Its INSAT-4 series satellites weigh around four tonnes and cost about Rs.3 billion.

In April this year, ISRO shot its first mini satellite - Indian Mini Satellite (IMS-1) - weighing 85 kg on board the Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV-C9).

"The cost of IMS-1 was around Rs.500 million. The value of each satellite would vary depending on its payload - the instruments it would carry," Murthy said.

"The mini satellite has two high performance payloads - multi-spectral camera and hyper-spectral camera. Injected into polar sun-synchronous orbit, the satellite is providing good data," said the 52-year-old Murthy, who was the project director for Cartosat I and IMS-1 satellites.

The mini satellite too has advanced features.

"The miniaturisation technologies, developed for small satellites, can be transplanted to bigger ones, thereby reducing their weight," he added.

ISRO will launch its second micro satellite YOUTHSAT next year, carrying two Indian payloads and one from Moscow University, Russia.

"We will also launch SARAL, a mini satellite with French payload some
time in 2010," Murthy said.

Speaking of the application potential of small satellites, he added: "It is mind-boggling. They can be used in remote sensing, atmospheric monitoring, gas detection, pollution monitoring, ionospheric tomography, ocean monitoring and studies, low earth orbit communications, stellar monitoring, space physics experimentation, data collection and others."

The small satellites will initially be flown as "co-passengers" in the Indian rockets PSLV and Geosynchronous Satellite Launch Vehicle (GSLV).

According to Murthy, many space agencies are now involved in making small satellites.

ISRO will be crossing swords with the Britain-based Surrey Satellite Technology Ltd, OHB Germany, Canada's MDA and Comdev, Israel Aerospace Industries, Orbital Sciences in the US, Thales Alenia in Europe among others.

The Indian space agency, having the necessary expertise in making big communication satellites, hopes that it can supply satellites to overseas players.

"We are targeting a revenue of around $60 million from manufacturing satellites for others," K.R. Sridhara Murthi, executive director of Antrix Corp Ltd, the commercial arm of the Indian space agency, told IANS.

ISRO has built and delivered a 32 transponder satellite, W2M, weighing 3,200 kg for the Paris-based Eutelsat Communications.

The order is from Europe's leading satellite system specialist EADS Astrium.

The transponders supplied by a European manufacturer were assembled at ISRO's satellite centre in Bangalore.

ISRO has won another contract from Avanti Screen Media, again through EADS Astrium, to make a highly adoptable satellite.

--IANS

Post your comment

Read other business-india-news stories

Visit Home Page for fresh content


Rating: This article has not been rated yet.

Rate:
 


 

Latest News Headlines:

Bollywood join hands for a cause for the elderly
Bumper tea production in Assam recovers losses caused by weather
Vikas Sinha brought to Delhi by ED officials for further interrogation
Militants kill a BSF constable and his wife in Jammu and Kashmir
Madhu Koda to be questioned by IT department from Tuesday
Dalai Lama visits Tawang, calls China's objections baseless
Naxalites attack police camp; abduct four , kill three policemen in Midnapore
Car rally organized to spread awareness about traffic discipline in Kolkata
'Friends' movie not happening, says Courtney Cox
Newly constituted Maharashtra Govt. holds first cabinet meeting in Mumbai
India ups the ante against China on Maoist menace
Victoria Beckham to start modelling agency
India worried over rise of terrorism in Afghanistan, Pakistan: Manmohan Singh
BJP sets up panel to supervise its Karnataka government
Inefficiency, corruption two causes for poor implementation of govt. projects: Bajaj
Railways will set up Bankim research centre, if state cannot: Mamata
Snake catching training for fire fighters in Orissa
BJP resolves Karnataka muddle, Sushma to play key role
Anirban Lahiri wins BILT Open golf
Maoists kill four policemen in West Bengal
Mumbai police probing Headley's links with 26/11 attacks
Asia Cup Hockey: India eves lose to China in final
Case against 28 for pension fraud
Son shoots, sets ablaze father over land in Greater Noida
Son shoots, sets ablaze father over land in Greater Noida
UAE issues measures to counter money laundering
Diplomats pay homage to India's first woman diplomat
Quiet birthday for Advani; President, PM send greetings
MCC bags 'Icon City' award
Dalai Lama charms Monpas of Tawang
UAE hosts First Exporters Forum
Punjab pilgrim dies of heart attack in Pakistan
Devvarman storms into Charlottesville ATP Challenger final
Ian McKellen upset with Whoopi Goldberg
DMK fumes over MoS Napolean's humiliation in Andaman
Power breakdown hits Delhi Metro, hundreds stuck for hours
Militants kill militant-turned BSF jawan, wife in Rajouri
Ashok Leyland sees double-digit sales growth in FY10
Bajaj Finserv to enter construction equipment financing by 2010
Mulayam levels land grabbing charges against Mayawati, releases CD

  Home | Recommend Us | Contact us | Make NK your default homepage
  © 2001-2008 NEWKERALA.COM. All Rights Reserved.