Indian space agency ISRO is aiming for a world record by putting into orbit 83 satellites - two Indian and 81 foreign - on a single rocket in early 2017, a top official of Antrix Corporation said.
He said the company's order book stands at Rs. 500 crores while negotiations are on for launch order for another Rs. 500 crores.
"During the first quarter of 2017 we plan to launch a single rocket carrying 83 satellites. Most foreign satellites are nano satellites," Rakesh Sasibhushan, Chairman-cum-Managing Director of Antrix Corporation told IANS.
Antrix Corporation is the commercial arm of Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO).
He said all the 83 satellites will be put in a single orbit and hence there will not be any switching off and on of the rocket.
The major challenge for the proposed mission is to hold the rocket in the same orbit till all the satellites are ejected.
He said ISRO will use its Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle XL (PSLV-XL) rocket variant for the record launch.
For ISRO, launch of multiple satellites at one go is not a new thing as it has done it several times in the past.
According to Sasibhushan, the total payload/weight carried off into space by the PSLV-XL rocket will be around 1,600 kg.
Citing non-disclosure agreements, Sasibhushan declined to name the clients whose satellites ISRO will put into orbit.
(Also see: ISRO's GSAT-18 Satellite Successfully Launched on Ariane 5 Rocket)
He said some satellites belong to clients whose satellites ISRO put into orbit in the past.
Meanwhile, ISRO is conducting high-altitude tests with its own cryogenic engine that is expected to power the heavier rocket Geosynchronous Satellite Launch Vehicle-Mk III (GSLV Mk III).
The GSLV Mk III has a capacity to carry around four tonnes of load.
The rocket is scheduled to be flown in January 2017.
The GSLV Mk III rocket is expected to save precious foreign exchange for India as it pays to launch heavier satellites through foreign space agencies.
In an interaction, ISRO Chairman A.S. Kiran Kumar said the agency is looking forward to develop four-tonne communication satellites that will give the same output as a six-tonner.
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