Blue Blocks Students Secure Historic IN-SPACe Authorization; Payload Launches Successfully on PSLV-C62

NEWS UPDATE  |  Aerospace Education  |  Blue Blocks

Blue Blocks Students Secure Historic IN-SPACe Authorization; Payload Launches Successfully on PSLV-C62

DATELINE: HYDERABAD / SRIHARIKOTA — In a landmark achievement for secondary education, the student engineering team at Blue Blocks Montessori School has successfully executed the launch of their proprietary satellite payload, the SBB-1, aboard the Indian Space Research Organisation’s (ISRO) PSLV-C62 mission. The event, which took place at the Satish Dhawan Space Centre in Sriharikota, followed the receipt of official flight authorization from the Indian National Space Promotion and Authorization Center (IN-SPACe), validating the technical rigor of the 17-member student team.


IN-SPACe Authorization Letter
PSLV-C62 Lift-off

Left: The official authorization from IN-SPACe. Right: The SBB-1 payload lifting off on PSLV-C62.

The Official Seal of Approval

The path to orbit began long before the countdown. The crucial turning point was the issuance of the authorization letter from IN-SPACe, the single-window nodal agency for space activities in India.

This document serves as more than just a permission slip; it is a technical validation. It confirms that the payload designed by students aged 12 to 16 met the stringent safety, structural, and communication standards required for spaceflight. This authorization places Blue Blocks among a select group of educational institutions globally capable of meeting professional aerospace standards.

A “Textbook” Launch

The SBB-1 payload was integrated into the PSLV Orbital Experimental Module (POEM). Following a successful lift-off and stage separation, the student team monitored the deployment from the gallery, witnessing their classroom concepts endure the g-forces of a real-world launch.

“Receiving the IN-SPACe letter was the moment reality set in. It meant that professional space agencies did not just see us as kids; they saw us as engineers. Watching the PSLV-C62 clear the tower was the final proof that our calculations were correct.”

— Student Representative, Blue Blocks Engineering Team

About the Mission

The SBB-1 mission is not merely symbolic. It is a technical demonstration of student capability in:

  • Payload Design: Miniaturized component engineering.
  • Thermal Management: Ensuring survival in the harsh vacuum of space.
  • Data Telemetry: Establishing communication protocols for orbital data transmission.

What This Means for the Future

With this launch, Blue Blocks has effectively moved the goalposts for school-level education. The InnoVision 2050 initiative has transitioned from a theoretical framework to a proven methodology, demonstrating that with the right environment, students can contribute to national-level scientific missions.

Media Resources

For high-resolution images of the launch or a copy of the IN-SPACe authorization for press use, please verify through our official channels.

View the Launch Gallery

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