ISRO’s 101st Heartbreak: Inside PSLV-C61’s Third-Stage Anomaly & the Lost EOS-09 Earth Guardian

ISRO’s 101st Mission: When Ambition Met Reality

On May 18, 2025, ISRO’s PSLV-C61 rocket lifted off from Sriharikota, carrying the EOS-09 satellite—a cutting-edge Earth observer designed to revolutionize disaster management and agriculture. But a third-stage malfunction shattered hopes, marking ISRO’s third PSLV failure. Here’s a detailed breakdown of what went wrong and why it matters.

The PSLV-C61 Mission: By the Numbers

A quick glance at the mission’s critical stats:

ParameterDetails
Mission NumberISRO’s 101st launch
Rocket ConfigurationPSLV-XL (27th flight)
Height & Mass44.5 meters tall
PayloadEOS-09 satellite (1,696 kg)
Target OrbitSun Synchronous Polar Orbit (597 km altitude, 97.51° inclination)
Cost of FailureLost SAR imaging capabilities for agriculture, disaster response & security

EOS-09: The Satellite That Never Reached Its Home

The EOS-09 wasn’t just another satellite—it was India’s high-tech “Earth Guardian.” Here’s what made it special:

FeatureSpecification
Core TechnologyC-band Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR)
Key CapabilitiesAll-weather, day-night imaging
Design HeritageBuilt on RISAT-1 satellite bus
Mission Lifespan5 years (with deorbiting fuel reserved)
Unique Selling Point3x better image frequency than predecessors

The 8-Minute Flight That Ended in Despair

A minute-by-minute timeline of the mission’s critical phases:

Time Since LaunchEventOutcome
0:00LiftoffNominal
1:51First stage separationSuccessful
2:44Second stage ignition (Vikas engine)Nominal
4:36Third stage ignitionANOMALY DETECTED: Chamber pressure drop
8:23Fourth stage ignition (planned)Never activated
~15:00Mission declared unsuccessfulSatellite lost in wrong orbit

The Culprit: Third-Stage Motor Pressure Drop

The mission’s fatal flaw occurred 4.5 minutes into the flight. The third-stage solid motor’s chamber pressure fell abruptly, starving the rocket of thrust. This stage was critical for achieving orbital velocity. Without it, EOS-09 couldn’t reach its designated altitude, rendering it useless for Earth observation.

Space Debris Mitigation: The Unsung Hero

Despite the failure, ISRO’s responsible design choices stood out:

  • Fourth Stage Deorbiting Plan: Fuel reserved to lower PS4 stage orbit for faster atmospheric reentry.
  • EOS-09’s Built-in Safety: Satellite carried extra fuel to deorbit itself within 2 years of mission completion.
  • Global Impact: Aligns with UN’s 2030 Space Debris Mitigation Guidelines.

3 Lessons from ISRO’s 3rd PSLV Failure

  1. Solid Motors Need Scrutiny: Previous PSLV failures (1993, 2017) also involved solid-stage issues.
  2. Testing Over Success Rate: ISRO’s 94% success rate is stellar, but 100% is non-negotiable for national security payloads.
  3. Transparency Wins Trust: Immediate anomaly acknowledgment builds public confidence.

Read in Depth: The Technical Details of the Mission from ISRO.

What’s Next for ISRO?

  • Failure Analysis Committee: Engineers will reverse-engineer telemetry data to pinpoint the pressure drop cause.
  • PSLV-XL Redesign: Possible reinforcements to third-stage motor casing.
  • EOS-09 Replacement: A new satellite could launch by late 2026.

Conclusion: Failure Is the Stepping Stone

While the ₹365 crore mission’s loss stings, ISRO’s legacy of resilience remains intact. As Chairman S. Somnath stated: “Every anomaly teaches us how to protect tomorrow’s missions.” For a nation eyeing Venus and Mars, this stumble is but a comma—not a full stop.

Also Read: World Hypertension Day 2025: 10 Life-Saving Strategies to Conquer the Silent Killer

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