PSLV was initially
designed by ISRO to place 1,000 kg class Indian Remote Sensing (IRS) satellites
into 900 km polar SunSynchronous Orbits. Since the first successful flight in
October 1994, the capability of PSLV was successively enhanced from 850 kg to
1,600 kg. In its ninth flight on May 5, 2005 from the Second Launch Pad (SLP),
PSLV launched ISRO's remote sensing satellite,1,560 kg CARTOSAT-1 and the 42 kg
Amateur Radio satellite, HAMSAT, into a 620 km polar Sun Synchronous Orbit. The
improvement in the capability over successive flights has been achieved through
several means. They include increased propellant loading in the stage motors,
employing composite material for the satellite mounting structure and changing
the sequence of firing of the strap-on motors.
PSLV-C11 is 44.4 metre tall and has four stages
using solid and liquid propulsion systems alternately. The first stage,
carrying 138 tonne of propellant, is one of the largest solid propellant
boosters in the world. Six solid propellant strap-on motors (PSOM-XL), each
carrying twelve tonne of solid propellant, are strapped on to the first stage.
The second stage carries 41.5 tonne of liquid propellant. The third stage uses
7.6 tonne of solid propellant and the fourth has a twin engine configuration
with 2.5 tonne of liquid propellant.
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