India's GSAT-16 launched successfully

GSAT-16 was successfully launched on board Arianespace rocket from the space port of Kourou in French Guiana on Sunday.
BENGALURU:Augmenting India's space capacity to boost communication services, its latest satellite GSAT-16 was successfully launched on board Arianespace rocket from the space port of Kourou in French Guiana in the early hours on Sunday, after a delay of two days due to bad weather.
The
satellite with a lift-off mass of 3,181 kg was injected into the
intended Geosynchronous Transfer Orbit (GTO) about 32 minutes after a
perfect lift-off of Ariane 5 at 2.10 am on flight VA221, signifying the
221st launch of an Ariane family vehicle from the spaceport.
In
the dual rocket mission, GSAT-16 with 48 transponders, the largest-ever
carried by a communication satellite built by Indian Space Research
Organisation (ISRO), was ejected into space four minutes after its
co-passenger DIRECTTV-14 spacecraft, designed to provide direct-to-home
television broadcasts across the US, Arianespace said.
Soon
after the launch, the Bengaluru-headquartered ISRO's Master Control
Facility at Hassan in Karnataka took over the command and control of the
GSAT-16 and said initial checks indicated "normal health" of the
satellite.
ISRO
said the first orbit raising operation is scheduled for tomorrow at
around 03:50 AM as part of manoeuvres to place the satellite finally in
its designated slot at 55 deg East longitude in the Geostationary orbit
and co-located with GSAT-8, IRNSS-1A and IRNSS-1B satellites.
The
launch of GSAT-16 was originally scheduled for Friday but was put off
hours before the lift-off due to inclement weather at Kourou, which is
chosen for its strategic location of being close to the equator that is
ideally-suited for missions into the geostationary orbit.
Arianespace
rescheduled it for Saturday at 02.09 AM (IST) but within hours that too
was postponed, citing "unfavourable weather conditions (high altitude
winds" over the launch pad.
It was then rescheduled for wee hours of today.
"...
two days we had to wait for this to happen, but it has happened
excellently, so congratulations to all people from Arianespace for its
excellent performance," ISRO Satellite Centre (ISAC) Director S K
Shivakumar said at the Arianespace facility.
Arianespace said today's was the 63rd successful Ariane 5 launch in a row.
GSAT-16,
a multi-application telecommunications satellite, will cover the entire
Indian sub-continent. It is the 18th ISRO satellite to be launched by
Arianespace, starting with the Apple experimental satellite in 1981, an
Arianespace release said.
Shortly
after the orbit injection announcement, Arianespace Chairman and CEO
Stéphane Israël said: "Tonight, we are very proud of meeting the
expectations of these two loyal customers, whose diversity clearly
reflects our clientele"
Shivakumar
said Arianespace had given ISRO the precise injection parameters as
assured and in the next few days rest of the operational activities like
Onboard Liquid Apogee Motor (LAM) firing and others will be carried
out.
"Subsequently
telecommunication payload systems are planned as part of on orbit
testing and we hope to have the spacecraft ready for services by the end
of this year," he said.
GSAT-16
has 24 C-band, 12 Ku-band and 12 Upper Extended C-band transponders
that will boost public and private TV and radio services, large-scale
Internet and telephone operations.
It improves the national space capacity with 48 transponders joining 180 odd existing transponders with ISRO.
Hit
by capacity crunch, ISRO has leased 95 transponders on foreign
satellites mainly for private sector users like TV broadcasters who have
often complained of inadequate transponder capacity to meet their
requirements.
The transponder augmentation has become a pressing need, prompting advancement of GSAT-16 launch by about six months.
Today's
launch comes 11 months after the last Indian communication satellite —
GSAT-14 — was flown in January this year. GSAT-15 is scheduled for
launch in October next year.
"I
wish to inform that we will come back to Kourou with GSAT 15
spacecraft.It is at the advanced stage of integration at ISRO satellite
center where we are conducting tests as per plans. That is expected to be ready for launch some time by third quarter of 2016," Shivakumar said.
ISRO said the present orbit of GSAT-16 will be
raised to Geostationary Orbit of about 36,000 km altitude through three
orbit raising manoeuvres by the firing LAM engine.
"Preparations
are underway for the first firing, planned in the early hours of
December 8. The satellite will be placed in the Geostationary Orbit by
December 12 and subsequently the satellite's communication transponders
will be switched on for in-orbit testing,"it said.
India's
rockets PSLV and the present GSLV do not have the capability to launch
satellites of more than two tonne class, prompting ISRO to opt for an
outside launch.
ISRO is developing the next big launcher, GSLV-MkIII, which can put satellites of up to 4 tonnes in orbit.
The
Government in July, 2013 had given approval for GSAT-16 with a procured
launch cost and insurance both amounting to Rs 865.50 crore.
Ariane's
payload lift performance is more than 10,200 kg., including a combined
total of some 9,480 kg. for DIRECTV-14 and GSAT-16 passengers.
The designated on orbit operational life of GSAT-16 is 12 years.
In
the coming days, the deployment of appendages such as the solar panels,
antennas and three axis stabilisation of the satellite will be done.
GSAT-16 will replace INSAT-3E, which was decommissioned a little prematurely in April. -PTI