As of April 1, 2017, a total of 192 Indian objects are orbiting in space, catalogued by US Space Surveillance Network, said a retired Indian scientist.
New
Delhi: Indian space industry has been flourishing and giving its oversees
rivals a tough competition.
It has not only created a mark
in the space world but has also set examples for others to follow.
As of April 1, 2017, a total of
192 Indian objects are orbiting in space, catalogued by US Space Surveillance
Network, said a retired Indian scientist.
He was
citing the August 2017 issue of "Orbital Debris", a quarterly published
by NASA.
"Space objects include
functional satellites as well as debris. The term catalogued means the space
objects are tracked, updated, and their orbits are determined. The US and
Russia maintain the catalogues as they have the technical capabilities,"
M.Y.S. Prasad, a former Director of the Satish Dhawan Space Centre (SDSC), told
IANS.
The Indian navigation satellite
IRNSS-1H stuck inside the heat shield of PSLV-XL rocket that was launched on
August 31 is the latest in orbit.
Officials of the Indian Space
Research Organisation (ISRO) said the navigation satellite-heat shield assembly
-- together weighing around 2.4-tonnes -- now tumbling in outer space, is
expected to re-enter the earth`s atmosphere in a couple of months.
According to Prasad, the present
global capability of tracking the space debris is objects of bigger than
1-metre in GEO (geostationary equatorial orbit), and bigger than 10 cm in LEO
(low earth orbit).
Prasad said the limitation is
due to the sizing and capability of ground tracking systems. The objects in GEO
are tracked by optical telescopes while those in LEO are tracked by radars.
In India, the multi-object
tracking radar (MOTR) set up at the SDSC in Sriharikota is one of the biggest
radars in the world for tracking space debris, Prasad added.
He said MOTR is designed to
track 50cm X50cm debris at a slant range of 1,000 km, and 30cm x 30cm debris at
a slant range of 800 km and most of the debris, which cause damage to
operational satellites can easily be tracked.
Source :- Zee News
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