Table of Contents
This article presents a comprehensive list of Indian satellites launched from 1975 to 2024, an essential resource for students preparing for competitive exams, especially in the government sector. Understanding the timeline and significance of these satellite launches can greatly enhance general awareness, a critical component in these examinations. By thoroughly studying this list, aspirants can gain valuable insights into India’s advancements in space technology, boosting their knowledge and preparedness for related questions in various exams.
What Is a Satellite?
Satellites, also known as artificial satellites, are deliberately placed in orbit around celestial bodies. These man-made objects serve a wide range of purposes, including communication relay, weather forecasting, navigation, broadcasting, scientific research, and Earth observation. Satellites play a vital role in various fields, enabling us to gather valuable data and enhance our understanding of the world.
- A satellite is an object in space that orbits or circles around a bigger thing. There are two kinds of satellites: natural (such as the moon orbiting the Earth) or artificial (such as the International Space Station orbiting the Earth).
- Since 1975, India has been successfully launching a varied range of satellites.
- Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO), a State-run space agency of India, is responsible for designing, building, launching, and operating these satellites.
Snapdragon Satellite Technology
Type Of Satellites
In order to fulfill its vision and service goals, the Department of Space has been developing mainly satellites for communication, earth observation, scientific, navigation, and meteorological purposes.
SATELLITES | |
---|---|
Type of Satellite | Application |
Communication Satellites | Supports telecommunication, television broadcasting, satellite news gathering, societal applications, weather forecasting, disaster warning, and Search and Rescue operation services. |
Earth Observation Satellites | Provides remote sensing data for land and water resources management, cartography, oceanography, atmospheric monitoring, and other Earth observation applications. |
Scientific Spacecraft | Conducts research in areas such as astronomy, astrophysics, planetary and Earth sciences, atmospheric sciences, and theoretical physics. |
Navigation Satellites | Offers navigation services for civil aviation requirements and user demands of positioning, navigation, and timing based on independent satellite navigation systems. |
Experimental Satellites | Mainly used for experimental purposes, including remote sensing, atmospheric studies, payload development, orbit controls, and recovery technology testing. |
Small Satellites | Sub 500 kg class satellites that serve as a platform for stand-alone payloads for Earth imaging and science missions with a quick turnaround time. |
Student Satellites | Part of ISRO’s Student Satellite program, encouraging universities and institutions to develop Nano/Pico Satellites for educational and research purposes. |
Beidou Satellite Navigation System
List Of Satellites Launched In India
India has launched several significant satellites through ISRO. These include the INSAT series for communication and weather forecasting, the Cartosat series for Earth observation and mapping, and the Mangalyaan mission (Mars Orbiter Mission), which marked India’s achievement as the first country to reach Mars.
List Of Satellites Launched In India | ||
Launch year | Satellite | Importance |
1975 | Aryabhatta | India’s first satellite. |
1979 | Bhaskara Sega-I | India’s first experimental remote sensing satellite carried TV and microwave cameras. |
Rohini Technology Payload | The First Indian launch vehicle Failed to achieve orbit. | |
1980 | Rohini RS-1 | India’s first indigenous satellite launch was used for measuring the in-flight performance of the second experimental launch of SLV-3. |
1981 | Rohini RS-D1 | Launched by the first developmental launch of SLV-3, used for conducting remote sensing technology studies using a sensor payload. |
Apple | First experimental communication satellite. | |
Bhaskara-II | Second experimental remote sensing satellite. | |
1982 | INSAT-1A | First operational multipurpose communication and meteorology satellite. |
1983 | Rohini RS-D2 | Identical to RS-D1. |
INSAT-1B | Identical to INSAT-1A. | |
1987 | SROSS-1 | It carried a payload for launch vehicle performance monitoring and for gamma-ray astronomy. Failed to achieve orbit. |
1988 | IRS-1A | India’s first operational remote sensing satellite. |
SROSS-2 | Carried remote sensing payload of the German space agency and gamma-ray astronomy payload. | |
INSAT-1C | Same as INSAT-1A. | |
1990 | INSAT-1D | Identical to INSAT-1A. |
1991 | IRS-1B | Improved version of IRS-1A. |
1992 | INSAT-2DT | Launched as Arabsat 1C. |
SROSS-C | It carried gamma-ray astronomy and aeronomy payload. | |
INSAT-2A | The first satellite in the second-generation Indian-built INSAT-2 series. | |
1993 | INSAT-2B | The second satellite in the INSAT-2 series. |
IRS-1E | Earth observation satellite. Failed to achieve orbit. | |
1994 | SROSS-C2 | Identical to SROSS-C. |
IRS-P2 | Launched by the second developmental flight of PSLV. | |
1995 | INSAT-2C | It has capabilities such as mobile satellite service, business communication, and television outreach beyond Indian boundaries. |
IRS-1C | Launched from Baikonur Cosmodrome. | |
1996 | IRS-P3 | It carried a remote sensing payload and an X-ray astronomy payload. |
1997 | INSAT-2D | Same as INSAT-2C. |
IRS-1D | Same as IRS-1C. | |
1999 | INSAT-2E | Multipurpose communication and meteorological satellite. |
OceanSat-1 | It carried an OCM and MSMR. | |
2000 | INSAT-3B | Multipurpose communication satellite. |
2001 | GSAT-1 | Experimental satellite for the first developmental flight of GSLV-D1. Failed to complete its mission. |
TES | It is considered a prototype for future Indian spy satellites. | |
2002 | INSAT-3C | Augmented the INSAT capacity for communication and broadcasting |
Kalpana-1 | First meteorological satellite built by ISRO. | |
2003 | INSAT-3A | Multipurpose communication satellite, similar to INSAT-2E and Kalpana-1. |
GSAT-2 | Experimental satellite for the second developmental test flight of GSLV. | |
INSAT-3E | Communication satellite to augment the existing INSAT System. | |
ResourceSat-1 | Intended to supplement and replace IRS-1C and IRS-1D. | |
2004 | GSAT-3 | India’s first exclusive educational satellite. |
2005 | CartoSat-1 | Earth observation satellite. |
HamSat | Micro-satellite built in collaboration with Indian and Dutch researchers. | |
INSAT-4A | Advanced satellite for direct-to-home television broadcasting services. | |
2006 | INSAT-4C | Geosynchronous communications satellite. Failed to achieve orbit. |
2007 | CartoSat-2 | Advanced remote sensing satellite |
SRE-1 | An experimental satellite that was launched as a co-passenger with CARTOSAT-2. | |
INSAT-4B | Identical to INSAT-4A. | |
INSAT-4CR | Identical to INSAT-4C. | |
2008 | CartoSat-2A | Identical to CARTOSAT-2. |
IMS-1 | Low-cost microsatellite imaging mission. Launched as co-passenger with CARTOSAT-2A. | |
Chandrayaan-1 | India’s first unmanned lunar probe. | |
2009 | RISAT-2 | Radar imaging satellite. Launched as a co-passenger with ANUSAT. |
AnuSat-1 | Research micro-satellite. It has since been retired. | |
OceanSat-2 | Continues mission of OceanSat-1. | |
2010 | GSAT-4 | Communications satellite with technology demonstrator features. Failed to achieve orbit. |
CartoSat-2B | Identical to CartoSat-2A. | |
StudSat | India’s first pico-satellite (weighing less than 1 kg). | |
GSAT-5P | C-band communication satellite. Failed to achieve the mission. | |
2011 | ResourceSat-2 | Identical to ResourceSat-1. |
YouthSat | Indo-Russian stellar and atmospheric mini-satellite. | |
GSAT-8 or INSAT-4G | Communications Satellite | |
GSAT-12 | Augmented the capacity of the INSAT system for various communication services. | |
Megha-Tropiques | Jointly developed by ISRO and the French CNES. | |
Jugnu | Nano-satellite developed by IIT Kanpur. | |
SRMSat | Nano-satellite developed by SRM Institute of Science and Technology. | |
2012 | RISAT-1 | India’s first indigenous all-weather Radar Imaging Satellite. |
GSAT-10 | India’s advanced communication satellite. | |
2013 | SARAL | Joint Indo-French satellite mission for oceanographic studies. |
IRNSS-1A | The first of seven satellites in the IRNSS navigational system. | |
INSAT-3D | It is a meteorological Satellite with advanced weather monitoring payloads. | |
GSAT-7 | It is an advanced multi-band communication satellite dedicated to military use. | |
Mars Orbiter Mission (MOM) or Mangalyaan-1 | India’s first Mars orbiter. | |
2014 | GSAT-14 | Intended to replace GSAT-3, and to augment the in-orbit capacity of Extended C and Ku-band transponders. |
IRNSS-1B | It is the second of seven satellites in the IRNSS system. | |
IRNSS-1C | It is the third satellite in the IRNSS. | |
GSAT-16 | It has the highest number of transponders in a single satellite (48 transponders). | |
2015 | IRNSS-1D | It is the fourth satellite in the IRNSS. |
GSAT-6 | Communication satellite that marks the success of an indigenously developed upper-stage cryogenic engine. | |
Astrosat | India’s first dedicated multi-wavelength space observatory. | |
GSAT-15 | Communications satellite. | |
2016 | IRNSS-1E | It is the fifth satellite in the IRNSS. |
IRNSS-1F | It is the sixth satellite in the IRNSS. | |
IRNSS-1G | It is the seventh satellite in the IRNSS. | |
Cartosat-2C | Identical to CARTOSAT-2,2A and 2B. | |
SathyabamaSat | A micro-satellite designed and built by Sathyabama University, Chennai. | |
Swayam-1 | A 1-U pico-satellite designed and built by the students of the College of Engineering, Pune. | |
INSAT-3DR | An advanced meteorological satellite | |
Pratham | A mini-satellite built by students and researchers at IIT, Mumbai. | |
PISat | A micro-satellite designed and built by the students of PES Institute of Technology, Bengaluru. | |
ScatSat-1 | Miniature satellite to provide weather forecasting, cyclone prediction, and tracking services to India. | |
GSAT-18 | The heaviest satellite owned by India at the time of its launch. | |
ResourceSat-2A | Identical to Resourcesat-1 and Resourcesat-2. | |
2017 | CartoSat-2D | ISRO holds the world record for launching the most satellites by a single launch vehicle. |
INS-1A | One of 2 nano-satellites designed and manufactured by ISRO, as part of the constellation of 104 satellites launched in a single go. | |
INS-1B | One of 2 nano-satellites designed and manufactured by ISRO, as part of the constellation of 104 satellites launched in a single go. | |
South Asia Satellite | It is offered by India as a diplomatic initiative to its neighboring countries (SAARC region) for communication, remote sensing, resource mapping, and disaster management applications. | |
GSAT-19 | It is the heaviest rocket (and the heaviest satellite) to be launched by ISRO from Indian soil. | |
NIUSat | It is built by the students of Noorul Islam University, Kanyakumari. | |
CartoSat-2E | 7th satellite in the Cartosat series to be built by ISRO. | |
GSAT-17 | India’s 18th communication (and to date, its heaviest) satellite | |
IRNSS-1H | First satellite to be co-designed and built-in collaboration with private sector assistance. Failed to achieve orbit. | |
2018 | CartoSat-2F | 6th satellite in the Cartosat series to be built by ISRO. |
MicroSat-TD | It is a technology demonstrator and the forerunner for future satellites in this series. | |
INS-1C | Third satellite in the Indian Nanosatellite series. It will carry MMX-TD Payload from SAC. | |
GSAT-6A | A high-power S-band communication satellite. It will also provide a platform for developing technologies. | |
IRNSS-II | Eighth satellite of IRNSS. | |
GSAT-29 | High-throughput Communication Satellite | |
HySIS | Hyperspectral imaging services for agriculture, forestry, resource mapping, geographical assessment, and military applications. | |
ExseedSat-1 | India’s first privately funded and built satellite. | |
GSAT-11 | Heaviest Indian spacecraft in orbit to date. | |
GSAT-7A | Services for IAF and Indian Army. | |
2019 | Microsat-R | Suspected to have been destroyed in the 2019 Indian anti-satellite missile test. |
PS4 Stage attached with KalamSAT-V2 | Used PSLV’s 4th stage as an orbital platform. | |
GSAT-31 | Replacement of the aging INSAT-4CR. | |
EMISAT | Electromagnetic intelligence to track any enemy radars for IAF. | |
PS4 Stage attached with ExseedSat-2, AMSAT, ARIS and AIS payloads | Utilization of the fourth stage directly as a satellite for experiments. | |
RISAT-2B | Successor to old RISAT-2. | |
Orbiter of Chandrayaan-2 | India’s second lunar exploration mission. | |
Cartosat-3 | One of the optical satellites with the highest resolutions in the world. | |
RISAT-2BR1 | Improved resolution of 0.35 meters. | |
2020 | GSAT-30 | Replacement of INSAT-4A. |
EOS-01 | Space-based synthetic aperture imaging radar. | |
CMS-01 | Extended C-band coverage for mainland India, Lakshadweep, and Andaman & Nicobar Islands. | |
2021 | Sindhu Netra | Earth observation satellite used by Indian Navy for surveillance over the Indian Ocean. |
SDSat | This Nanosatellite was developed by Space Kidz India to study radiation. It carried 25,000 names and a copy of the Bhagavad Gita into space. | |
JITSat | Developed by JIT as part of the UNITYSat constellation. | |
GHRCESat | Developed by GHRCE as part of the UNITYSat constellation. | |
Sri Shakthi Sat | Developed by SIET as part of the UNITYSat constellation. | |
EOS-03 | India’s first real-time Earth observation satellite and the first satellite of the GISAT constellation. | |
2022 | RISAT-1A | Radar imaging satellite to facilitate high-quality images and additional security to Indian borders. |
OCEANSAT-3 | Earth observation satellite for oceanographic and atmospheric studies. | |
GSAT-20 | Communication satellite to add data transmission capacity required by Smart Cities Mission of India. | |
GISAT-2 | Multispectral and hyperspectral Earth-imaging satellite. | |
Aditya-L1 | Solar coronal observation spacecraft. | |
GSAT-32 | Communications satellite. | |
TDS-01 | A technology demonstrator for TWTA and atomic clock. | |
SPADEX x 2 | Demonstration of rendezvous space docking and berthing of spacecraft. | |
GSAT-7R | Military communications satellite. | |
DRSS-1 | Communications satellite comprising two satellites in the initial stage– CMS-04 and IDRSS-2 in GEO. | |
DRSS-2 | ||
X-ray Polarimeter Satellite | Space observatory to study polarization of cosmic X-rays. | |
INSAT 3DS | Military communications satellite. | |
2022-23 | GSAT-7C | Military communications satellite. |
AstroSat-2 | It is a space telescope and successor of AstroSat-1. | |
2023 | NISAR | A joint mission between ISRO and NASA is a dual-frequency synthetic aperture on an Earth observation satellite. |
2024 | Lunar Polar Exploration Mission | Joint lunar exploration mission between ISRO and JAXA. |
2024-25 | Mangalyaan-2 | India’s second Mars exploration mission. |
2025 | DISHA | Twin aeronomy satellite mission. |
2024-26 | Shukrayaan-1 | Venus exploration satellite. |
Total Number of Satellites Launched by India Till Now
India has successfully launched a total of 424 satellites for 34 different countries as of 22 April 2023. These foreign satellites have been deployed into space through India’s reliable and efficient launch vehicles. These satellite missions have fostered international collaborations and strengthened India’s reputation as a reliable partner in space exploration and satellite deployment. The successful launch of foreign satellites by India reflects the country’s technological advancements and its growing significance in the field of space research and exploration.
Here are advantages of launching foreign satellites:
- Revenue Generation: Launching foreign satellites generates revenue for the host country, contributing to economic growth and funding for future space missions.
- Global Partnerships: Collaborating with foreign countries builds international partnerships, fostering diplomatic and scientific cooperation.
- Technological Advancement: Handling diverse satellite payloads enables technical expertise and innovation in space technology.
- Enhanced Reputation: Successfully launching foreign satellites boosts a country’s credibility and reputation in the global space industry.
- Skill Development: Working on diverse international projects improves the skills of scientists and engineers, advancing the country’s technical workforce.
India’s First Satellite Name
Aryabhata, India’s inaugural satellite, was named in honor of the renowned Indian astronomer. It holds the distinction of being the country’s first entirely indigenous spacecraft, developed and manufactured within India’s borders. On 19 April 1975, Aryabhata was successfully launched into space using a Soviet Kosmos-3M rocket from the Kapustin Yar launch site. This historic achievement showcased India’s growing capabilities in space technology and marked a significant milestone in the nation’s space exploration endeavors.
Artificial Satellite of India
India’s voyage into space began with the launch of its inaugural satellite, Aryabhatta, in 1975. Since then, the country’s space exploration has traversed a remarkable journey of 47 years, witnessing the successful deployment of over 120 satellites. This expansive timeline encompasses significant milestones, technological advancements, and notable achievements that have propelled India’s presence in the global space arena.
These missions have strengthened India’s capabilities in areas like communication, weather forecasting, navigation, and scientific research, solidifying its reputation as a rising space power.
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