India's space start-up Skyroot Aerospace marked its arrival with the historic successful sub-orbital test flight by the company-designed Vikram-S rocket (in picture) in November 2022. (Photo: ISRO/Twitter)
NEW DELHI (PTI): Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) will turn its focus on science experiments in 2023 with dedicated missions to the Sun - Aditya - and the Moon - Chandrayaan-3 - even as the nascent start-up sector is set to soar in the space applications segment.
The upcoming year will also witness a series of experiments on India's maiden human spaceflight - Gaganyaan project - with the first uncrewed mission expected in the last quarter of 2023 aimed at validating the performance of the human-rated launch vehicle, orbital module propulsion system and recovery operations.
ISRO further plans to conduct the first runway landing experiment (RLV-LEX) of the reusable launch vehicle early this year from Aeronautical Test Range in Karnataka's Chitradurga, Union Minister of State in Prime Minister's Office Jitendra Singh told Parliament this month.
Indian start-ups that marked their arrival with the sub-orbital flight by Skyroot Aerospace's Vikram-S rocket – the first by a private sector company and the launch of Pixxel's hyperspectral satellites Shakuntala, on SpaceX's Falcon-9 rocket in April and Anand onboard ISRO's PSLV in November.
Skyroot Aerospace, which launched India's first privately developed rocket in November, plans to put a client satellite in orbit sometime this year, while Agnikul Cosmos, a start-up incubated on the IIT-Madras campus, has also lined up the test flight of its highly customisable 'Agnibaan' rocket.
"We are developing six commercial hyperspectral imagery satellites which will be ready for launch this year," Awais Ahmed, Pixxel co-founder and CEO, had told PTI.
Ahmed said many more rocket companies around the globe will see their first orbital launches come to fruition which will lead to a rocket-themed game of thrones as they vie for the same set of customers sending satellites into space.
The start-ups are eyeing the huge space applications market in the country, which was earlier the sole domain of ISRO, carving a niche for themselves in the earth imaging sector, developing rockets to launch small satellites, designing cheaper fuels for satellites and even planning to take tourists on a space journey.
"The potential for innovative space applications is immense, especially if established aerospace companies form partnerships with businesses that traditionally haven’t ventured into orbit, e.g. pharmaceutical, agriculture companies," Chaitanya Dora Surapureddy, Chief Financial Officer, DhruvaSpace, told PTI.
DhruvaSpace had launched two satellites Thybolt 1 & 2 onboard ISRO's PSLV C-54 mission that demonstrated the ability to conduct amateur satellite communication which will help ham radio operations.
Surapureddy said DhurvaSpace has already bagged its first commercial contract worth Rs 20 crore to build satellites.
"The number of space startups in India has already crossed 100 and these startups have raised funding of more than US$ 245.35 million," Lt Gen A K Bhatt (retd.), Director General, Indian Space Association (ISpA) told PTI.
Agnikul also inaugurated its first launchpad and mission control centre at ISRO's Satish Dhawan Space Centre at Sriharikota.
In 2022, the industry witnessed some major milestones with NewSpace India Limited (NSIL) authorising the space conglomerate formed by Larsen & Toubro (L&T) and Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd a Rs 860-crore contract for the commercial development of next five Polar Satellite Launch Vehicles (PSLVs).
OneWeb also signed up the services of ISRO’s launch vehicle to put 36 satellites in low earth orbit from Sriharikota. A follow-up launch of another 36 satellites is expected in 2023.
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