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Chandrayaan launch at Sriharikota
Video taken outside Sriharikota, of PSLV 11C lifting off with Chandrayaan satellite. |
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Chandrayaan-1 Launched from SriHariKota
India's Much anticipated Chandrayan-1 was successfully launched from Sriharikota, off the Andhra Pradesh coast, early morning on Wednesday. site:http://trendsanalysis.blogspot.com/ |
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ISRO - SHAR Sriharikota
ISRO - SHAR Sriharikota |
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Ghantasala-remembered -Sriharikota-Chndrayaan
Old song of Ghantasala calling Moon to explain inter family problems. Now we are going to moon from the land of telugus-Sriharikota |
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PSLV launch - Sriharikota
I happened to witness one of the milestones of our ISRO and tried to capture that moment in my good for nothing mobile. |
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sitams ECE(2009) guys sriharikota(all shown in this video)
GOOD VIDEO-sitams ECE(2009) guys sriharikota(all shown in this video) |
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SCS school sriharikota
SCS school sriharikota |
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sriharikota(sitams-ece b(2009)
SRIHARIKOTA TOUR BY ECEB(2009)(dance by pavan) |
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SCS school sriharikota
SCS school sriharikota |
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SCS school sriharikota
SCS school sriharikota |
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sriharikota(sitams -ece)
sriharikota tour by sitams -ECE B(FINAL YEAR) |
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SCS school sriharikota
SCS school sriharikota |
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Chandrayaan -1 Launch
On October 22 2008 06:22 AM, India launched its first mission to moon named Chandrayaan-I using PSLV C-11 which took off from Satish Dhawan Space Center at Sriharikota.Once Chandrayaan-1 enters lunar orbit, Indian Space Research Organization would become the 6th space agency to have successfully sent a probe to the moon after USA, USSR/Russia, ESA, Japan and China. |
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India launches polar satellite
Sriharikota, Apr 28(ANI): India's Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle, PSLV-C9 blasted off into space from ISRO's Satish Dhawan Space Centre in Sriharikota in Andhra Pradesh on April 28. The PSLV is carrying ten satellites including the country's latest remote sensing satellite CARTOSAT-2A. Besides the 690 kg CARTOSAT-2A, the PSLV is also carrying ISRO's Indian Mini Satellite-1 (IMS-1), weighing 83kg, and eight nano satellites built by universities and research institutes in Canada and Germany. |
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Chandrayaan Launch
22.10.2008 Video of Chandrayan 1 Launch from Satish Dhavan Space Centre, Sriharikota. We can see the trajectory of chandrayaan and noise. Video Taken from a distance of 12 km (approx) from the launchpad. |
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Chandrayan Launch
Launch of Chandrayan 22.10.2008 Sriharikota Better Video at http://in.youtube.com/watch?v=ha4R14H9fcA See that. Thanks |
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gslv launching
gslv launching from sriharikota |
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SHAR: the Indian launch base
Date- 15th Oct 08. Source- http://www.esa.int/esa-mmg/mmg.pl?type=V 'On the island of Sriharikota, 150 kilometres north of Chennai, India has based its launch centre SHAR, the Satish Dhawan Space Centre, named after the research scientist and former president of the ISRO, the Indian Space Research Organisation. At SHAR two launch pads have been built for the two rockets developed by India: the PSLV, a 4-stage launch vehicle using liquid and solid propulsion and able to launch one-tonne craft into geostationary transfer orbit and the GSLV, a 2-tonne capacity launcher for geostationary transfer orbit. PSLV has the performance level required to launch Chandrayaan-1 on its way to the moon. Sriharikota is like a real town. About 2000 employees are living on the island with their families.' |
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pslv launching
pslv launching from sriharikota |
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ISRO PSLV-C9 set to launch 10 satellites
The Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) will launch ten satellites including country's latest remote sensing satellite and eight nano satellites from abroad tomorrow (Monday April 28). The satellites to be lifted off from Sriharikota will be carried by Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle -PSLV-C9. The cluster of satellites include the Indian Mini Satellite (IMPS-1) also. Latest remote sensing satellite CARTOSAT-2A, weighing about 690 kgs, carries a state-of-the-art panchromatic camera (PAN) which is capable of taking black-and-white pictures in visible region of the electromagnetic spectrum. It would be used for mapping purposes and management of natural resources. The Indian Mini Satellite (IMS-1) developed by ISRO, weighing 83 kgs, also incorporates many technologies. It is an experimental remote sensing satellite, it would also be used as a platform for trying out advanced technology in the coming launches, officials said. The eight nano satellites, built by universities and research institutions in Canada and Germany, are being launched under a commercial agreement. Of the eight nano satellites, six form a cluster called NLS-4. These satellites were built to test nano technologies for use in satellites. The weight of these nano satellites vary from three to 16 kgs with a total weight of 50 kgs. "The launch campaign is progressing satisfactorily at Satish Dhawan Space Centre", ISRO officials said. The satellites were already integrated with the launch vehicle and the vehicle was moved to the second launch pad at Satish Dhawan Space Centre in Sriharikota, they said. The objective of the 'Indian human space flight' is to develop a space vehicle to carry a crew of two to low earth orbit and return safely to a pre-determined destination. The duration of the proposed mission is about a week. There will be provision for emergency mission abort and crew rescue. The main task before ISRO is "man-rating" of indigenously built Geosynchronous Satellite Launch Vehicle (GSLV), which would launch an autonomous orbital mission vehicle. "The reliability of GSLV is 90 per cent. Man-rating means its reliability should be 99.99 per cent", the official said. Then facilities will have be established to train astronauts, besides designing of crew module. In January 2007, ISRO demonstrated India's capability in important technologies such as aero-thermo structures, deceleration and floatation systems, navigation, guidance and control, with the successful launch, in-orbit operation, re-entry and recovery of SRE-1 (space capsule recovery experiment). |
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India's first lunar mission blasts off
SRIHARIKOTA: India's first lunar mission blasted off from the national space centre on the southeastern coast early Wednesday. The unmanned lunar orbiting spacecraft Chandrayaan-1 was launched with an Indian-built rocket at 6:22 am (0052 GMT) from the Satish Dhawan Space Centre in Sriharikota, 80 kilometres (50 miles) north of Chennai. The Chandrayaan-1 is being sent on a two-year orbital mission to provide a detailed map of the miner. |
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gslv launching
gslv launch from sriharikota |
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IBN live chandrayaan launch SHAR
Live launching of Chandrayaan 1 by PSLVC11 from Satish Dhwan Space center, Sriharikota. IBN |
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India launches first moon mission
NEW DELHI, India (CNN) -- India launched its first lunar mission on Wednesday, with hopes of achieving high-resolution images of the moon's topography and diving into the international space race. The unmanned lunar orbiter Chandrayaan-1, or "moon craft" in ancient Sanskrit, came at 6:20 a.m. Wednesday (8:50 p.m. ET) from the Sriharikota space center in southern India. The two-year mission seeks high-resolution imaging of the moon's surface, especially the permanently shadowed polar regions, according to the Indian Space Research Organization. It will also search for evidence of water or ice and attempt to identify the chemical breakdown of certain lunar rocks, the group said. Despite the numerous missions to the moon over the past 50 years, "we really don't have a good map of the moon," said Miles O'Brien, CNN chief technology and environment correspondent. "The goal is to come up with a very intricate, three-dimensional map of the moon." The Chandrayaan-1 is carrying payloads from the United States, the European Union and Bulgaria, and India plans to share the data from the mission with other programs, |
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Chandrayaan-1 launched
Indias first unmanned flight to the moon blasted off from Sriharikota, off the Andhra Pradesh coast, early morning on Wednesday. Chandrayaan will orbit the moon for two years. A principal objective of Chandrayaan is to look for Helium 3, an isotope which is very rare on earth but is sought to power nuclear fusion and could be a valuable source of energy in the future, some scientists believe. |
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