ISRO successfully demonstrates Inflatable Aerodynamic Decelerator technology
Press Trust of India | September 3, 2022 | 10:37 PM IST | 2 mins read
At around 84 km altitude, the IAD was inflated and it descended through the atmosphere with the payload part of the sounding rocket.
BENGALURU: ISRO on Saturday successfully demonstrated a new technology with Inflatable Aerodynamic Decelerator (IAD) which it said is a game changer with multiple applications for future missions. An IAD, designed and developed by Vikram Sarabhai Space Centre (VSSC), was successfully test flown in a 'Rohini' sounding rocket from Thumba Equatorial Rocket Launching Station (TERLS).
The IAD was initially folded and kept inside the payload bay of the rocket. At around 84 km altitude, the IAD was inflated and it descended through the atmosphere with the payload part of the sounding rocket. The pneumatic system for inflation was developed by Liquid Propulsion Systems Centre (LPSC). The IAD has systematically reduced the velocity of the payload through aerodynamic drag and followed the predicted trajectory.
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"This is the first time that an IAD is designed specifically for spent stage recovery. All the objectives of the mission were successfully demonstrated," the Bengaluru-headquartered space agency said in a statement. "The IAD has huge potential in a variety of space applications like recovery of spent stages of the rocket, for landing payloads on to Mars or Venus and in making space habitat for human space flight missions," it said.
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Rohini sounding rockets are routinely used for flight demonstration of new technologies being developed by ISRO as well as by scientists from India and abroad. In today's flight, along with IAD, new elements like a micro-video imaging system which captured the bloom and flight of IAD, a miniature software-defined radio telemetry transmitter, MEMS-based acoustic sensor and a host of new methodologies were flight tested successfully, ISRO said.
"These will be inducted later to the major missions. Sounding rockets offer an exciting platform for experimentation in the upper atmosphere," it said. "This demonstration opens a gateway for cost-effective spent stage recovery using the Inflatable Aerodynamics Decelerator technology. It can also be used in ISRO's future missions to Venus and Mars," said ISRO Chairman S Somanath, who witnessed the launch.
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