ISRO’s SpaDEX mission successfully achieves 2nd docking of satellites — Dr Jitendra Singh
Published on Apr 21, 2025
By IANS
- NEW DELHI — Union Minister Dr Jitendra Singh on Monday said that the ISRO’s
SpaDEX mission has successfully achieved second docking of satellites.
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- In a post on X social media platform, the minister said
he is "glad to inform that the second docking of satellites has been
accomplished successfully".
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- “As informed earlier, the PSLV-C60 / SPADEX mission was
successfully launched on 30 December 2024. Thereafter the satellites were
successfully docked for the first time on 16 January 2025 at 06:20 AM and
successfully undocked on 13 March 2025 at 09:20 AM,” he mentioned.
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- The minister further said that further experiments are
planned in the next two weeks.
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- In January, with the successful docking of the satellites
of the SpaDEX mission, India became the fourth nation to ace the space docking
technology.
- Read: SpaDeX mission: India becomes 4th nation to achieve successful space docking
- ISRO informed the merging of two small spacecraft --
SDX01, the Chaser, and SDX02, the Target -- weighing about 220 kg each. The
satellites were part of the Space Docking Experiment (SpaDeX) mission, which
lifted off aboard the PSLV-C60 rocket, from Sriharikota on December 30.
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- India is now the fourth country, after the US, Russia,
and China, to master the docking technology. The docking technology was
indigenously developed and has been named the ‘Bharatiya Docking System’.
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- It includes a docking mechanism, a suite of four
rendezvous and docking sensors, power transfer technology, indigenous novel
autonomous rendezvous and docking strategy, and an inter-satellite
communication link (ISL) for autonomous communication between spacecraft,
incorporated with inbuilt intelligence to know the states of the other
spacecraft, among others.
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- ISRO believes the SpaDeX mission will help establish
India's capability in orbital docking -- a key technology for future human
spaceflight and satellite servicing missions.
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- In addition to joining the elite club of spacefaring
nations, docking technology is also key for India's impending space missions
including the Moon mission, setting up the Indian space station, and lunar
missions like Chandrayaan-4 without the support of GNSS from Earth.
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