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MUMBAI : Asian giants
India and China have reached a ground-breaking
agreement to promote cooperation in civil
nuclear energy. Maybe they should now consider
extending that cooperation to space exploration
as well.
Four
months ago, the launch of India's first
commercial communications satellite from
home soil ended in failure after the the
three-stage 414-tonne launch vehicle GSLV-F02
veered off course soon after lift-off, and
ultimately crashed into the Bay of Bengal.
The GSLV-F02 was carrying the state-of-the-art
communication satellite Insat-4C, the second
satellite in the Insat-4 series.
China,
meanwhile, suffered a setback of a different
sort after its first direct-to-home broadcasting
satellite, failed less than 10 days after
launch, the South China Morning Post reported.
While the launch of SinoSat-2, China's first
domestically made satellite, went off smoothly,
the satellite's solar panel faily shortly
after it went into orbit, the newspaper
reported, quoting sources familiar with
the situation. The satellite has suffered
a serious power failure and appeared beyond
repair, the report added.
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