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		Single Indian rocket puts satellites in 
		three orbits, in first for nation 
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		 [April 01, 2019] 
		By Krishna N. Das 
 NEW DELHI (Reuters) - An Indian rocket on 
		Monday placed domestic and foreign satellites in three different orbits 
		on a single flight, a first for the nation and a low-cost option that 
		could burnish its reputation for pioneering affordable options in space.
 
 The launch of a domestic intelligence satellite and 28 foreign ones came 
		less than a week after India used an anti-satellite missile to take down 
		one of its own satellites, demonstrating a capability only China, Russia 
		and the United States had possessed previously.
 
 The state-run Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) said 24 
		satellites from the United States, two from Lithuania and one each from 
		Spain and Switzerland were positioned in Monday's launch, in addition to 
		India's EMISAT satellite.
 
 "This particular mission is very special for ISRO," its chairman, K. 
		Sivan, said after the launch from India's southeastern state of Andhra 
		Pradesh.
 
		
		 
		"This is for the first time the PSLV is carrying out three orbital 
		missions in a single flight," he said in a speech, referring to the 
		Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle family of rockets.
 Sivan, who previously told media the "three-in-one" launch would help 
		cut costs, said the agency aimed to complete 30 more missions this year, 
		including India's second lunar exploration program known as the 
		Chandrayaan-2.
 
 Among the satellites in Monday's launch are 20 earth-imaging satellites 
		of Planet Labs Inc, a private satellite operator based in San Francisco.
 
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			India's Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV) C45, carrying 
			Electromagnetic Spectrum Measurement satellite 'EMISAT' and 28 other 
			satellites, lifts off from the Satish Dhawan Space Centre in 
			Sriharikota, India, April 1, 2019. REUTERS/P. Ravikumar 
            
 
            Two of the satellites, one from Lithuania and another from 
			Switzerland, will be used for the "Internet of Things", or 
			connecting physical devices to the Web, the agency added.
 Prime Minister Narendra Modi congratulated the agency on the launch 
			and said his government was working on raising citizens' interest in 
			science and their respect for scientists.
 
 ISRO wants companies such as state-owned Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd 
			and Mumbai-based conglomerate Larsen & Toubro to build its rockets 
			in future.
 
 Last year India said it expected to spend less than 100 billion 
			rupees ($1.4 billion) on its first manned space mission to be 
			launched by 2022, suggesting it is likely to be cheaper than similar 
			projects by the United States and China.
 
 India's 2014 launch of an unmanned Mars mission cost $74 million, 
			just a fraction of the $671 million spent by U.S. space agency NASA 
			on its MAVEN Mars mission.
 
 ($1=69.3080 Indian rupees)
 
 (Reporting by Krishna N. Das; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)
 
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