ISRO’s RLV success to cut launch costs by 80 per cent 

At 7.10 am, a Chinook Helicopter of the Indian Air Force carried a winged RLV (a  space plane) and flew to a height of 4.5 km to a predetermined spot.
The Reusable Launch Vehicle used for autonomous landing in Chitradurga, Karnataka | isro
The Reusable Launch Vehicle used for autonomous landing in Chitradurga, Karnataka | isro

CHITRADURGA:  The Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) on Sunday landed its Reusable Launch Vehicle (RLV) in an autonomous mode, demonstrating its capability of using such spacecraft to deliver low-earth orbit satellites in space and return to the ground for reuse in a subsequent mission. 
This is expected to cut the costs of satellite launching missions by 80%.

The successful experiment, called Reusable Launch Vehicle Autonomous Landing Mission (RLV-LEX), was carried out at the Aeronautical Test Range (ATR) of the Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) in Challakere in Karnataka’s  Chitradurga district.

At 7.10 am, a Chinook Helicopter of the Indian Air Force carried a winged RLV (a  space plane) and flew to a height of 4.5 km to a predetermined spot. It released the RLV from that height, which then carried out a precise autonomous landing on the runway at DRDO’s ATR in Challakere.

The technique used to launch the vehicle was “a first in the world” where a winged body was carried to an altitude of 4.5 km by helicopter and released for carrying out an autonomous landing on a runway. 
“The autonomous landing was carried out under the exact conditions of Space Re-entry vehicle’s landing,” the space agency tweeted. 

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