Hyderabad:The Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) is preparing to launch the European Space Agency's Proba-3 solar mission aboard its PSLV-C59 vehicle. The launch, set to take ESA satellites into a highly elliptical orbit as a Dedicated commercial mission of NewSpace India Limited (NSIL), will take off at 4:08 PM IST on December 4, 2024, from Satish Dhawan Space Centre in Sriharikota, Andhra Pradesh.
Proba-3 is an In-Orbit Demonstration mission of the European Space Agency which aims to demonstrate the first-ever "precision formation flying" where two small satellites are launched together but then move apart to fly in formation while maintaining a fixed configuration in space, acting as a single large rigid structure in space.
ESA's Proba-3 Mission at a glance
Proba-3 is the newest solar mission in the European Space Agency’s Proba series. The first mission in the series (Proba-1) was launched by ISRO in 2001, followed by the launch of Proba-2 in 2009. Developed at an estimated cost of 200 million euros, the Proba-3 will be launched into a highly elli0ptical orbit around 600 x 60,530 km with an orbital period of 19.7 hours.
Proba-3 consists of two spacecraft-- the Coronagraph Spacecraft (CSC) and the Occulter Spacecraft (OSC), which will be launched together in a stacked configuration. The mission aims to prove innovative formation flying and rendezvous technologies to prepare for future multi-satellite missions flying as one virtual structure.
A unique solar coronagraph
The Coronagraph and Occulter will then form a solar coronagraph, a special instrument designed to observe the outermost part of the Sun's atmosphere, called the corona. The temperature in this part reaches 2 million degrees Fahrenheit, which makes it hard to observe closely. However, it is crucial for scientific study as all space weather -- including solar storms and winds that can disrupt satellite communications, navigation, and power grids on Earth -- originates from the corona.