Pushpak, an Indian reusable launch vehicle (RLV), will do its third trial flight by one of the defense airfields available in Karnataka (an Indian state). The spaceship with wings that resemble an SUV is designed to retake space and bring about reusability. Tomorrow at 7 am, from Chalakere Runway, we will be blasting on our way to glory.
Pushpak is India’s billing steps that bring down this cost to make space available. Generally, the upper stage that carries the vehicle electronically is to be reused; they say this would reduce the costs and space debris. The RLV could refuel the satellites orbiting the orbit and may deliver the satellites to the ground or for retrofit.
This project has been 10 years in the making, and the previous two mission flights have shown encouraging results. In 2016, the RLV could land safely on a simulated runway above the bay, Bengal. The rocket was taken up by an Indian Air Force CHINOOK helicopter into RERL-LEX (RE). It did not face any problems; rather, it landed autonomously.
PSLV launch vehicle is worth mentioning because it is already ISRO’s cost-effective space mission, for which Chairman of ISRO S Somanath says that bringing Pushpak to the same mission is worthwhile. A project with substantial government funding, running over 100 crores, has been in this process. With the triumph of the manned space mission being Pushpak, the possibility of taking the lead to launch India’s space station, Bhartiya Antariksha Station, becomes even more hopeful by the year 2035.
‘-Puspak’, the spacecraft counos to ancient India’s epic, Tiparaman, is derived from the phrase
“vehicle of God Kubera,illionaire and the Lord of the Wealth”.
This decision thus indulges in fulfilling the aspiration and demonstrating the business view of the Indian space program. The author and media theorist Marshall McLuhan first proposed a global village. The concept highlights the growing interconnectedness of nations and the impact of technology on shaping ideas, culture, and political systems worldwide.
Its emergence on the scene could be seen as a clear demonstration of India’s commitment to bringing this field of research and development to a new level, i.e., cost-effectiveness. Often seen as a new and essential endeavor in the global space arena, the flight of our rocket tomorrow will be the next important step in India’s bid to become a major player in the international space business of the future.