News Brief
ISRO PSLV-C61
The Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) on Sunday (18 May) attempted its 101st major mission with the PSLV-C61 rocket carrying the EOS-09 satellite, but the launch ended in failure shortly after liftoff.
The PSLV-C61 was intended to place the Earth Observation Satellite EOS-09 into a Sun Synchronous Polar Orbit (SSPO), but the mission could not be completed.
ISRO's chairman V Narayanan confirmed that the first two stages of the space agency's trusted four-stage Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV) performed normally.
"Today we targeted the 101st launch from Sriharikota, the PSLVC61 EOS-09 mission. The PSLV is a four-stage vehicle and up to the second stage, the performance was normal. The third stage motor started perfectly but during the functioning of the third stage we are seeing an observation and the mission could not be accomplished," Narayanan said, NDTV reported.
“We will come back after analysis,” added the ISRO Chief.
The mission was part of ISRO’s push for sustainable space operation, with EOS-09 equipped with deorbiting fuel to ensure safe disposal at the end of its service.
The PSLV-C61 marks the 63rd flight of the PSLV family and the 27th in the PSLV-XL configuration.
EOS-09 was designed as a cutting-edge Earth observation satellite with C-band synthetic aperture radar, high-resolution images of the Earth's surface under all weather conditions, day or night—aimed at strengthening India’s surveillance, disaster management, and resource monitoring systems.