Unmanned capsule on board GSLV Mk-III, designed to carry three astronauts, is also successfully tested

This article is more than 5 years old

This article is more than 5 years old

India successfully launched its biggest ever rocket on Thursday carrying an unmanned capsule that could one day send astronauts into space, as the country ramps up its ambitious space programme.

The rocket, designed to carry heavier communication and other satellites into higher orbit, blasted off from Sriharikota in the south-east state of Andhra Pradesh in a test mission costing nearly $25m (£16m).

“This was a very significant day in the history of (the) Indian space programme,” Indian Space Research Organisation (Isro) chairman KS Radhakrishnan said from mission control as fellow scientists clapped and cheered.

Isro scientists have been riding high since an Indian spacecraft reached Mars in September on a shoestring budget, winning Asia’s race to the red planet and sparking an outpouring of national pride.

Although India has launched lighter satellites in recent years, it has struggled to match the heavier loads that other countries increasingly want sent up.

The new rocket, weighing 630 tonnes and capable of carrying a payload of four tonnes, is a boost for India’s attempts to grab a greater slice of the $300bn global space market.

“India, you have a new launch vehicle with you. We have made it again,” said S Somnath, director of the mission.

“The powerful launch vehicle has come to shape, which will change our destiny ... (by) placing heavier spacecraft into communications orbits.”

The rocket was carrying an unmanned crew capsule which Isro said successfully separated from the rocket and splashed down in the Bay of Bengal off India’s east coast 20 minutes after liftoff.

The Indian-made capsule is designed to carry up to three astronauts into space.

Isro officials said the crew capsule would be recovered from the sea and ferried back to Sriharikota by Friday for further studies.

India’s manned spaceflight programme has seen multiple stops and starts in recent years, and Isro said the crew capsule project would take at least another seven years to reach the point where an astronaut could be put into space.

The Indian prime minister, Narendra Modi, hailed the test mission as “yet another triumph of (the) brilliance and hard work of our scientists” in a post on Twitter.

Radhakrishnan said the next step would be to develop a more powerful indigenous engine, reducing India’s reliance on those built in Europe, for the rocket, which is officially named the Geostationary Satellite Launch Vehicle Mk-III.

“Our own cryogenic engine, which is at development stage, will be used in powering the advanced heavy rockets in the next two years,” he said.