India's most powerful rocket launches satellite into orbit

REUTERS

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India launched a communication satellite using its most powerful rocket on Monday, improving its prospects of winning a bigger share of the more than US$300 billion global space industry and its hopes of a manned mission.

The 13-story high rocket, the Geosynchronous Satellite Launch Vehicle (GSLV) MK III, or "Fat Boy", lifted off from the Sriharikota space center in southern India at 5.28 p.m. local time (1158 GMT) in clear blue skies.

At 3,136 kg, the GSAT-19 satellite is the heaviest India has attempted to put in orbit, the space agency said.

China, US, Russia, Japan and European Space Agency have the capability to launch satellites weighing more than three tonnes.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi congratulated the scientists behind the launch and said it took India closer to the next generation of launch capabilities.

"The nation is proud," he said in a Twitter post.

Modi's government has been promoting a home-grown space program as a demonstration of low-cost technology and in February it launched 104 satellites in a single mission, most of them for foreign customers.

The Indian space agency has also considered a manned space mission involving sending astronauts into a low-earth orbit, but the program has not yet been cleared by the government.

In 2014, scientists first flew the GSLV MK III and checked the working of an unmanned crew module on the vehicle, suggesting that it would be the launch platform for a manned mission in future.

In May, India launched a communications satellite for its smaller neighbors to share, part of its efforts to build goodwill in the region.

A 2015 Space Foundation report pegged the global space industry at US$323 billion. India's share of global launch services industry is about 0.6 percent, government data shows.

(REUTERS)