ISRO To Set A New Record: Countdown To EOS-03 Satellite Launch Begins, Natural Disasters.
Key Sentence:
- The launch will take place on August 12 at 5.53 am, although it will depend on the weather.
- EOS-03 will be installed in Earth orbit using GSLV-F10
ISRO is going to set a new record on Thursday. India is going to make a giant leap into space three days before the 75th Independence Day. Through it, the country can now be monitored from the room as well. ISRO is set to launch India's first Earth observation satellite, EOS-03. The countdown to this has begun. Once that is successful, India's strength will increase. The satellite will be able to monitor disasters like hurricanes and floods in India.
Launching depends on weather conditions.
ISRO has tweeted that it has been countdown. The countdown to the launch of Geosynchronous Satellite Launch Vehicle-F10 EOS-03 has started today at Satish Dhawan Space Center (SDSC) Shar, Sriharikota.
EOS-03 is a very modern satellite, which will be installed in Earth orbit using GSLV-F10. If this testing is successful, India's strength will increase further, and it will be easier to understand the movement of the weather.
Satellite and its features
According to the information received, the GSLV flight will take the satellite to a 4-meter diameter-ogive-shaped payload fairing, which is happening flown for the first time on a rocket that has operated 13 other flights so far carrying satellites and partner missions into space.
That is why it is assumed that the EOS-03 satellite will take pictures of the entire country four to five times in a single day, which will send the primary data on weather and climate change.
The EOS-03 satellite will monitor almost real-time natural disasters like floods and hurricanes in Bharti as it undergoes significant environmental and climatic changes.
The first mission from the year took place in February
Earlier, on February 28, ISRO completed its first mission of the year. India's rocket was launched from the Sriharikota space center on February 28 with a Brazilian satellite for the first time. India's PSLV C-51 took off from the Sriharikota space center, carrying Brazil's Amazonia-1 and 18 other satellites.
Source from Divyabhashkar