India's GSLV-F10 rocket carrying an Earth observation satellite crashed shortly after launch. This
The launch began at 03:13 Moscow time from the launch pad of the Satish Dhawan Space Center on the island of Sriharikota in the Bay of Bengal.
The operation of the first and second stages was normal. However, the cryogenic ignition of the third stage did not occur due to a technical problem. The mission cannot be completed as intended.
ISRO Press Service
Technical problems began approximately six minutes after the cryogenic third stage launched. During a malfunction, the satellite was lost, ISRO said.
It was planned that it will last at least 10 years andwill transmit data to Earth in near real time for monitoring natural disasters, cyclones, thunderstorm fronts, etc., as well as collecting information for the needs of agriculture and forestry.
This is the first ISRO malfunction since 2017, interrupting a series of 14 successful launches.
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