India Achieves 100th Launch from Satish Dhawan Space Centre, Sends Navigation Satellite into Orbit

India successfully launched its 100th mission from the Satish Dhawan Space Centre on Tuesday, January 29, 2025. The Geosynchronous Satellite Launch Vehicle (GSLV) Mk II lifted off at 7:53 p.m. Eastern (0053 UTC) carrying the NVS-02 navigation satellite. This satellite is the second of five new-generation spacecraft for the Navigation with Indian Constellation (NavIC) system, designed to provide accurate real-time positioning, velocity, and timing services to India and surrounding areas.

The 2,250-kilogram NVS-02 was placed at 111.75 degrees East, replacing IRNSS-1E, launched in 2016. The satellite uses a combination of indigenous and procured atomic clocks for precise time estimation. The GSLV launcher is a three-stage vehicle with solid, liquid, and cryogenic stages and four liquid boosters.

This mission was the first of 10 orbital launches planned by India in 2025, which would mark a domestic launch record. Major missions include a joint Earth science mission between NASA and ISRO, named NASA-ISRO Synthetic Aperture Radar (NISAR), expected to launch around March on a GSLV rocket, and an uncrewed test flight for Gaganyaan human spaceflight program on a human-rated LVM-3 launcher. The first launch of the Vikram-1 for private company Skyroot Aerospace could also take place this year.

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