Indian Space Programme Achieves Progress - PDF
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Maharaja Surajmal Brij University
V. Narayanan
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Summary
ISRO Chairman V. Narayanan discussed the Indian space program's achievements at the Aero India International Seminar. The speech highlighted key milestones and future endeavors, including the development of launch vehicles, the success of the Chandrayaan 3 landing, and plans for future space missions. The seminar focused on futuristic aerospace technologies and challenges in design and testing.
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Here is the transcription of the image to a structured markdown format: # Indian Space Programme Achieves Unmatched Progress on Global Timeline: ISRO Chairman V. Narayanan This image shows two photographs of ISRO Chairman V .Narayanan at the inaugural Aero India International Seminar in Bengaluru....
Here is the transcription of the image to a structured markdown format: # Indian Space Programme Achieves Unmatched Progress on Global Timeline: ISRO Chairman V. Narayanan This image shows two photographs of ISRO Chairman V .Narayanan at the inaugural Aero India International Seminar in Bengaluru. The first picture shows Dr. Narayanan standing holding materials for the event. The other image shows a panel of men seated at a table at the event. Background text visible in the images include: * "Challenges in Design" * "International Conference on Military" * "8th-9th February" * "The Leela Bhartiya City Bengaluru" * "Aero India 2025" * "Futuristic Aerospace Technologies" The Indian Space Research Organisation Chairman, Dr. V. Narayanan, today said that the Indian space programme has seen steady progress on a timeline that no other country could achieve. Speaking at the inaugural Aero India International Seminar in Bengaluru today, Dr. Narayanan pointed out that the Indian space programme started as late as 1962, and the first rocket launch was only in 1975. Since then, the Indian space programme has taken an upper trajectory with many milestones in its legacy. He pointed out that from launching a 45-kilo satellite to lower Earth orbit, India has today developed the sixth-generation launch vehicles and subsystems. It has indigenously developed the rocket engine along with the cryogenic stage and mastered the use of liquid hydrogen as fuel in a very short span of time. ISRO has today completed 100 launches, and it has taken 433 satellites from 35 countries to its designated orbit in outer space. India was successful in landing on the south pole of the Moon, something that no other country had achieved till then. The chairman pointed out that ISRO was successful in reducing the speed of Chandrayaan 3 from 6077 km per hour to zero speed in just 90 minutes and achieved the landing without a flaw. He said ISRO is now getting ready for Gaganyaan, Chandrayaan 4 and 5, and the setting up of the Bharatiya Space Station. He said that Indian astronauts will be sent to outer space by 2028 and the space station by 2035. The Chairman of DRDO, Dr. Samir V. Kamat, who spoke on the occasion, expressed a need to speed up the certification process of designs and platforms developed indigenously. He also stressed that MSMEs must have greater participation in the certification process and a method evolved for quicker validation of the designs and insertion of new technologies. The two-day seminar is organised by the Centre for Military Airworthiness and Certification, CEMILAC of DRDO, in association with the Aeronautical Society of India, as a prelude to the Aero India show set to begin in Bengaluru on Monday. The theme of the seminar is Futuristic Aerospace Technologies: Challenges in Design Validation and Emerging Trends in Futuristic Aerospace Technologies and Military Airworthiness and Certification: Challenges in Design and Testing.