BANGALORE, India โ€” A turbo pump malfunction is being blamed for the April 15 launch failure of Indiaโ€™s Geosynchronous Satellite Launch Vehicle (GSLV).

The rocket veered from its flight path nearly five minutes after liftoff and crashed into the Bay of Bengal along with a communications satellite.

The Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) said July 9 that investigators traced the failure to a turbo pump malfunction that abruptly stopped the flow of liquid hydrogen fuel to the thrust chamber of the rocketโ€™s domestically built third stage just 2.2 seconds after its ignition. ISRO said in a statement that investigators do not know for sure why the turbo pump failed but suspect that excessive pressure built up and thermal stresses produced โ€œgripping at one of the seal locationsโ€ that caused a rotor to seize and rupture the turbine casing. A series of ground tests are planned to confirm the scenario, ISRO said.

The launch failure is a setback for Indiaโ€™s plans to attain self-sufficiency in cryogenic propulsion development. ISRO spent 3.3 billion rupees ($70.5 million) to develop the engine.

ISRO aims to flight test the upper-stage engine within a year โ€œafter incorporating necessary corrective measures,โ€ the statement said. The next two GSLVs, meanwhile, will use Russian cryogenic stages.

  

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Based in Bangalore, Killugudi S. Jayaraman holds a doctorate in nuclear physics from the University of Maryland and a master's degree in journalism from the Medill School of Journalism at Northwestern University. He was formerly science editor of the...