An Indian PSLV rocket with a record payload of 104 satellites blasts off from the Satish Dhawab Space Centre at Sriharikota. |
You
probably missed it. I know I did.
This past Wednesday, February 15 as those of us in the U.S. were transfixed with horror with
the Cheeto in Charge and his imploding maladministration, India leapt to the forefront of commercial space technology when it launched a rocket that deployed a record 104 satellites in Sun-synchronous orbit. The payloads
included three satellites from India, one each from Kazakhstan, Israel, The Netherlands, Switzerland, and the United
Arab Emirates along with 96 from the U. S.
That right, India, the teeming giant that most Americans
associate with the Taj Mahal, Bollywood,
customer service call centers, and vast
urban slums. We were largely unaware
it even had a space program. Now it has impressively joined an elite
club with space capabilities and
effective delivery systems for commercial
and scientific satellites that
includes the European Space Agency,
Russia, China, and Japan in
addition to the U.S.
But
the American space program, once the
envy of the world, and symbol U.S. technological and global
supremacy in the 20th Century,
is floundering and beginning to lag behind its international competitors. NASA
without a sexy manned space exploration
program, its aging Space Shuttle
fleet in mothballs, high profile deep space probes now sailing out of the solar system, and an ill-defined
and under-funded “mission to Mars” proclaimed
by Barack Obama now in doubt simply because it was his initiative, is in trouble. NASA now launches satellites with nearly obsolescent rockets and has to
send astronauts to the International Space Station hitching a
ride with the Russians.
It
is also in the cross hairs of a deeply anti-science Republican Congress because
its research satellites were
amassing tons of data confirming the
effects of man-made climate change. For that matter, space exploration has
destroyed the young earth fantasies of
Biblical creationists, now a
powerful GOP constituency even
though they are a fraction of the
population.
The
American space program is under oblique
attack in other ways as well.
Funding for research universities—the
one education area where the U.S.
remained at the top of the world—is deeply threatened both by the general
anti-science bias of the Republicans and because universities are now despised and distrusted as hot beds of
liberalism. And most recently Trump’s anti-immigrant rampage threatens
top talent international professors, researchers, and students.
On September 1, 2016 a SpaceX’s Falcon 9 rocket exploded during pre-launch preparation at Cape Canaveral, a big set back to the American private launch industry. |
With
NASA floundering, America has put its faith in good ol’ capitalism. Private enterprise has gotten in to the
satellite launching business with mixed
results. Elon Musk’s highly touted SpaceX rocket exploded at its Cape Canaveral launch pad last year destroying a multi-million dollar Israeli internet access satellite for
use by Facebook.
American
and international users are also building all manner of satellites much faster
than the launch capacity of American
companies. They have turned increasingly to
international competitors. Now India has
entered that race spectacularly with a particularly low cost and efficient
launch vehicle.
The
Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV) is an expendable launch system developed and operated by the Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO). It was first the launch of developed
for the launch of its Indian Remote
Sensing (IRS) satellites into
Sun-synchronous orbits. That capability
was previously commercially available only from Russia. PSLV can also launch
small size satellites into geostationary
transfer orbit (GTO).
In
2015 India successfully launched 17 foreign satellites belonging to Canada, Indonesia, Singapore,
the United Kingdom and the United
States. It also impressively launched India’s first lunar probe Chandrayaan-1; first interplanetary mission, Mangalyaan, Mars orbiter; and first space observatory, Astrosat.
These
early successes sent American commercial launch companies into a full blown panic. They rushed to Congress to demand restrictions
be put on the ability of American satellite producers from using the cheap
Indian system or any other potential international competitors. They argued at hearings last April that, “Indian
launches are subsidized by the
government to a degree that other market
actors would be priced out of the
market.” Of course all international
space programs are subsidized by their governments. It what modern governments do. And the U.S. commercial industry is itself
subsidized in dozens of overt and covert ways not the least of which is being able to build on the technological base laid by
NASA and employing many former NASA
and NASA contractor scientists and engineers.
Congress
did not act at that time and as a result the Indian launch this week included 88
CubeSats were owned by Planet Labs, an Earth imaging private company based in San Francisco and Eight Lemur-2
satellites belonging to Spire Global which
will provide vessel tracking and weather measurement services. Planet Labs operates the world’s largest
fleet of private satellites. Both highly
satisfied customers are likely to continue to use ISRO launch services. Other customers are eager to sign on the dotted line.
So
it goes in the waning days of a fading empire and its frothing, fiddling emperor.
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