Gaganyaan Mission Delayed: ISRO Reschedules Lift-Off of India's Uncrewed Flight Test Vehicle Abort Mission by 30 Minutes

This mission represents a significant milestone in India's effort to demonstrate that it is possible to send humans into space. The test flight project aims to prove India's capacity to send humans into a 400-kilometre orbit and safely bring them back to earth with a splashdown in the Bay of Bengal Sea.

Gaganyaan Mission. (Photo credits: Twitter/ANI)

Sriharikota, October 21: The launch of the uncrewed flight test in the Gaganyaan Mission has been rescheduled for a lift-off at 8:30 a.m. on Saturday morning, an official statement said. Earlier, the first unmanned flight test, designated as the Test Vehicle Development Flight Mission-1 (TV-D1 Flight Test), was scheduled to be launched from Andhra Pradesh's Sriharikota by ISRO today at 8 a.m.

In a post on X (former Twitter), ISRO said, "The lift-off is rescheduled at 08:30 IST. Live streaming starts at 08:00 Hrs. IST." This flight test vehicle abort mission will demonstrate the performance of the Crew Escape system as part of the Gaganyaan mission. It will also test the safe landing in the Bay of Bengal after the rocket launch. Gaganyaan Mission: ISRO to Launch Uncrewed Flight Test From Sriharikota Today (Watch Video).

This mission represents a significant milestone in India's effort to demonstrate that it is possible to send humans into space. The test flight project aims to prove India's capacity to send humans into a 400-kilometre orbit and safely bring them back to earth with a splashdown in the Bay of Bengal Sea.

Visuals of the Sriharikota entrance establishment show model rockets being placed at the entrance. It's noteworthy that around 20 major tests, including three uncrewed missions of the Human-Rated Launch Vehicle (HLVM3), are planned.

The Gaganyaan project envisages a demonstration of human spaceflight capability by launching a crew of three members into an orbit of 400 km for a 3-day mission and bringing them safely back to earth by landing in Indian sea waters. This programme will make India the fourth nation to launch a manned spaceflight mission after the US, Russia, and China. Gaganyaan TV-D1 Test Flight: ISRO Gearing Up to Test Crew Escape System, Crew Module on October 21.

Building on the success of the Indian space initiatives, including the recent Chandrayan-3 and Aditya L1 missions, Prime Minister Narendra Modi directed that India should now aim for new and ambitious goals, including setting up 'Bharatiya Antariksha Station' (Indian Space Station) by 2035 and sending the first Indian to the Moon by 2040.

(This is an unedited and auto-generated story from Syndicated News feed, LatestLY Staff may not have modified or edited the content body)

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