
When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission.
A powerful Indian rocket will return to flight tonight (Jan. 11), and you can watch its bounceback mission live.
A PSLV rocket carrying the EOS-N1 military satellite and 15 other payloads is scheduled to lift off from India's Satish Dhawan Space Centre tonight at 11:47 p.m. EST (0447 GMT and 10:17 a.m. India Standard Time on Jan. 12).
You can watch it live here at Space.com, courtesy of the Indian Space Research Organisation, or directly via ISRO. Coverage will start 30 minutes before launch.
The PSLV (Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle) is a four-stage rocket that debuted in 1993. Tonight's mission will be its first since a May 2025 failure that resulted in the loss of ISRO's EOS-09 Earth-observing satellite.
That was the third failure for the 145.7-foot-tall (44.4 meters) PSLV out of 63 total liftoffs. The rocket has successfully lofted a number of high-profile payloads during its three decades of operation, including the Chandrayaan-1 moon probe in October 2008, the Mars Orbiter Mission in November 2013 and, in September 2023, Aditya-L1, India's first dedicated sun-studying spacecraft.
EOS-N1, also known as Anvesha, is a small Earth-observation satellite. Multiple sources identify it as a hyperspectral imaging satellite, meaning it will study our planet in hundreds of different wavelengths of light. And it will likely do so for the Indian military.
"The satellite will constantly scan the Earth's surface, sending back images that can generate valuable intelligence," wrote The Tribune, an English-language daily paper based in northern India.
"It will join India’s growing family of spy satellites that use radar and optical technology," the outlet added. "India has an active program to develop a fleet of military satellites for surveillance and communication."
The other payloads riding the PSLV tonight are a diverse bunch. Among them are a Thai-U.K. Earth-observing satellite, a Brazilian satellite designed to help distressed fishing boats, an in-orbit fueling demonstration by an Indian company and a reentry capsule from the Spanish startup Orbital Paradigm.
All of the payloads will head to low Earth orbit tonight except the reentry capsule, which is known as KID (Kestrel Initial technology Demonstrator). It will separate from the PSLV's fourth stage late in the flight and come back to Earth for a splashdown in the South Pacific.
Tonight's mission will be the ninth organized by NewSpace India Limited, ISRO's commercial arm.
NEUESTE BEITRÄGE
- 1
Venezuelan President Maduro arrives in New York following U.S. capture: Full coverage03.01.2026 - 2
Former GLP-1 users regain lost weight after about 18 months, study says08.01.2026 - 3
The Most Famous Virtual Entertainment Powerhouses of the Year07.07.2023 - 4
Why is Jerome Powell being investigated? Making sense of the DOJ's probe into the Federal Reserve chair.12.01.2026 - 5
In the background: Visiting Notable Film Areas All over the Planet05.06.2024
Ähnliche Artikel
Great DSLR Cameras for Photography Devotees06.06.2024
Comet MAPS faces a make-or-break moment as it dives toward the sun on April 4 — could it shine in the daytime sky?31.03.2026
The 10 Most Progressive Logical Disclosures07.07.2023
Iran war pushes Germany's deficit to 4.2% as growth outlook is cut by 50%01.04.2026
Disability rights activist and author Alice Wong dies at 5115.11.2025
What loving-kindness meditation is and how to practice it in the new year29.12.2025
These 3 Nail-Free Finds Completely Transformed My Drab Bathroom13.12.2025
Russia Establishing Long-Range Drone Bases In Belarus, Warns Ukraine05.04.2026
Lego's $650 Pokémon set is already sold out as demand, preorders surge13.01.2026
Takeda's AI-crafted psoriasis pill succeeds in late-stage studies18.12.2025













