ISRO · Space Centres · Satellites · Missions · Launch Vehicles · Astronauts
| Body | Details |
|---|---|
| Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) | Formed 1969; HQ: Bengaluru; Current Chairman: V. Narayanan |
| Indian Space Association | Started October 2021; association of space/satellite companies; Tagline: "From Earth to the Universe"; boosts private sector participation |
| New Space India Limited (NSIL) | Established 2019; commercial arm of ISRO |
| Centre / Unit | Established | Location | Key Function |
|---|---|---|---|
| Vikram Sarabhai Space Centre (VSSC) | 1963 | Thiruvananthapuram | Develops satellite launch vehicle technology |
| Satish Dhawan Space Centre (SHAR) | 1971 | Sriharikota, Andhra Pradesh | ISRO's main launch centre |
| Space Applications Centre (SAC) | 1972 | Ahmedabad, Gujarat | Space applications |
| ISRO Satellite Centre (ISAC) | 1972 | Bengaluru, Karnataka | Satellite design, manufacturing, testing, management |
| National Remote Sensing Centre (NRSC) | 1974 | Balanagar, Hyderabad, Telangana | Remote sensing |
| ISTRAC | 1976 | Bengaluru, Karnataka | Tracking satellites, telemetry, sending commands |
| Master Control Facility (MCF) | 1982; Second unit 2005 | Hassan, Karnataka; Bhopal, MP | Satellite control |
| Liquid Propulsion Systems Centre (LPSC) | 1987 | Bengaluru, Karnataka | Design & development of liquid propulsion vehicles |
| ISRO Propulsion Complex (IPRC) | 2014 | Mahendragiri, Tamil Nadu | Storable liquid propellants; cryogenic engine development |
| Orbit Type | Details |
|---|---|
| Low Earth Orbit (LEO) | Altitude ~200–2000 km; elliptical orbit |
| Solar-Synchronous Orbit | Altitude 500–1000 km; near-polar orbit, North to South |
| Geosynchronous Orbit | Altitude 36,000 km; circular equatorial orbit |
| Highly Elliptical Molniya Orbit | Altitudes 504–39,834 km |
| Year | Achievement |
|---|---|
| 1957 | First artificial satellite — Sputnik-1 (USSR) |
| 1958 | First US artificial satellite — Explorer-1 |
| 1959 | First unmanned spacecraft to land on the Moon — Luna-2 (USSR) |
| 1969 | First spacecraft to land humans on the Moon — Apollo-11 (USA) |
| 1981 | First space shuttle in space — Columbia (USA) |
| 2001 | First space tourist — Dennis Tito; first spacecraft to land on an asteroid — NEAR Shoemaker (NASA), on Eros-433 |
| Agency | Full Name | Country / Type | HQ |
|---|---|---|---|
| Roscosmos | Russian Federal Space Agency | Russia | Moscow |
| CNES | Centre National d'Études Spatiales | France (1961) | Paris |
| NASA | National Aeronautics and Space Administration | USA (est. 1958) | Washington DC |
| ESA | European Space Agency | Intergovernmental; 22 members | Paris (1975) |
| JAXA | Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency | Japan (2003) | Tokyo |
| Country | First Satellite | Launch Date |
|---|---|---|
| Russia | Sputnik-1 | 4 Oct 1957 |
| USA | Explorer-1 | 31 Jan 1958 |
| France | Astérix on A-1 | 26 Nov 1965 |
| Japan | Ohsumi | 11 Feb 1970 |
| China | Dong Fang Hong-1 | 24 Apr 1970 |
| UK | Prospero on X-3 | 28 Oct 1971 |
| India | Aryabhata-1 | 19 Apr 1975 |
| Mission | Details |
|---|---|
| Chandrayaan-1 | Launched 22 Oct 2008; PSLV-C11 from Sriharikota; India's first lunar mission |
| Chandrayaan-2 | Launched 22 Jul 2019; targeted South Pole of Moon; Launch Vehicle: GSLV-MkIII (Bahubali); partially successful; impact point named Tiranga Sthal |
| Chandrayaan-3 | Launched 14 Jul 2023; Lander: Vikram, Rover: Pragyan; Launch Vehicle: LVM3-M4; landing site: Shiv Shakti Sthal |
| Mission | Details |
|---|---|
| Aditya L-1 | Launched 2 Sep 2023; PSLV-C57; India's first mission to study the Sun |
| ISRO's 100th Launch | 29 Jan 2025; Satellite: NVS-02 using GSLV F-15 |
| ISRO's First Launch | SLV-3E1 / Rohini Technology |
| Achievement | Person | Details |
|---|---|---|
| First Indian Astronaut | Rakesh Sharma | 1984; travelled on Soyuz T-11 |
| First Woman of Indian Origin in Space | Kalpana Chawla | 1997, 2003; travelled on Space Shuttle Columbia |
| Second Woman of Indian Origin in Space | Sunita Williams | 2006 |
| First Indian to reach ISS | Shubhanshu Shukla | Axiom Mission 4 (Ax-4) |
| Satellite | Launch Year | Key Details |
|---|---|---|
| Aryabhata | 19 April 1975 | Launched from Baikonur Cosmodrome, USSR |
| Bhaskara-I | 1979 | Soviet Intercosmos launch vehicle from Volgograd Station, USSR |
| Bhaskara-II | 1981 | Soviet Intercosmos launch vehicle from Volgograd Station, USSR |
| Rohini RS-1 | 1980 | Launched from Sriharikota using SLV-3 |
| APPLE | 1981 | Launched from Kourou Space Centre, French Guiana, using ESA's Ariane-4 |
| Kalpana-1 (METSAT) | 2002 | Launched from Sriharikota using PSLV-C4; India's first dedicated meteorological satellite |
| Generation | Satellites |
|---|---|
| First Generation | INSAT 1A, 1B, 1C, 1D |
| Second Generation | INSAT 2A, 2B, 2C, 2D, 2E |
| Third Generation | INSAT 3A, 3B, 3C, 3D, 3E |
| Fourth Generation | INSAT 4A, 4B, 4C, 4D, 4E |
| Vehicle | Key Details |
|---|---|
| SLV-3 | India's first launch vehicle; launched 18 July 1980; India became the 6th member of the Space Club (after USA, USSR, France, Japan, China) |
| PSLV | Launched 20 December 1993; ISRO's primary launch vehicle; four-stage rocket; launches to 400–900 km; carries up to 1750 kg |
| GSLV | Launches to 36,000 km; three-stage rocket; first launch 20 March 2001 (failed); first success 8 May 2003; carries up to 4000 kg; GSLV Mk III known as "Bahubali" for its heavy-lift capability |
| Observatory | Details |
|---|---|
| Hubble Space Observatory | Launched 1990 |
| Chandra X-ray Observatory | Launched 1999 |
| AstroSat | India's first space observatory mission, 2015 |
| Indian Astronomical Observatory (IAO) | Hanle, Ladakh (2015) |
| Tokyo Atacama Observatory (TAO) | World's highest astronomical observatory; Mount Chajnantor, Chile |