ISRO PSLV-C62 Failure: Third Stage Anomaly Loses Satellites
ISRO's PSLV-C62 mission on January 10, 2026, failed due to a third stage anomaly, resulting in the loss of the primary EOS-N1 Earth observation satellite and the student-built Anvesha nanosatellite among others. The first and second stages performed normally, but ignition issues prevented proper orbital insertion for the 16-satellite payload, including foreign ones. ISRO is analysing telemetry data to identify the cause and implement corrective measures for future launches.
India Tests Orbital Data Centre on Failed PSLV Mission
ISRO's PSLV-C62 mission featured the innovative Takeme2Space prototype—an orbital data centre and power bank for satellites offering on-orbit computing, storage, and recharging to reduce Earth dependency. Though third stage anomaly caused failure losing payloads including EOS-N1 and Anvesha, ground validation of the concept succeeded, advancing India's vision for self-reliant space infrastructure supporting deep space exploration and extended satellite operations.
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