Request Bharatiya Antariksha Station

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Bharatiya Antariksha Station (BAS), literally "Indian Space Station", is a space station proposed by the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO, pronounced "iss-ROW"). It is partly inspired by the ISS. Although I have not yet returned to Orbiter for personal reasons, I want to play with the station and dock/undock spacecraft, including the Gaganyaan (pronounced "guh-guhn-yahn") spacecraft. You can use the following source for the requested add-on: https://idrw.org/isro-expands-bharatiya-antariksha-station-design-from-25-to-55tons/.
 
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Vladimir Putin and Narendra Modi agreed to expand cooperation in manned spaceflight (Narendra Modi proposed creating a BRICS international research consortium)
 
BAS's orbit will be similar to the ISS, as per reports: https://www.indiatoday.in/amp/scien...-orbit-inclination-science-2564781-2024-07-10
Vladimir Putin and Narendra Modi agreed to expand cooperation in manned spaceflight (Narendra Modi proposed creating a BRICS international research consortium)
Not so relevant, but good news for India–Russia ties in space exploration.
 
apparently someone was concerned that the ISS and the Indian station could collide 🤭 expert completely excludes this possibility

The expert is a bit too optimistic there.

As long as BOTH stations are able to maneuver, they can be kept out of the way. Of course, there is still no right of way in space, no rules how to avoid collisions between active spacecraft. And fuel is precious. Especially Starlink is notorious for reacting late to collision warnings and forcing the other spacecraft to spend fuel. Since both stations need reboosts, it should be easy to coordinate the maneuers and stay in a box. If the people involved are adults.

If one of them can't maneuver, things get a bit harder, but still solvable, at least the legal problem is solved who has to move.

If both can't maneuver, its a lottery, but the low risk exists. Same altitude and same inclination can at least reduce the risk a lot (most collisions would happen at low velocity differences, similar to the Progress-Mir collision), but the LAN drift can still result in a fatal head-on collision eventually. And of course, fragmentation events will increase the risk again. And of course, inclination and nodes also get periodic and secular perturbations by Earth, Sun and Moon, even if they are similar for both stations then, they are never the same and will eventually become more distinct.

So, my choice of words would rather be: "We place it exactly there to keep the collision risk and the need for collision avoidance maneuvers as low as possible."

Skylab was also unable to maneuver and didn't collide with any Soviet space station during the period, neither Salyuz 3, Salyut 4 or Salyut 5, and at the time of Salyut 5, Skylab orbited already very low above the atmosphere. And the difference in inclination wasn't that big as well, Skylab orbited at 50°.
 
ISS is in an orbit at an altitude of about 420 km and an inclination of 51.6 degrees from the equatorial plane. The promising Indian station is planned to be placed in an orbit with an altitude of 400-450 km and an inclination of 51.5 degrees.

Mir space station was in the same orbit with the ISS
 
ISS is in an orbit at an altitude of about 420 km and an inclination of 51.6 degrees from the equatorial plane. The promising Indian station is planned to be placed in an orbit with an altitude of 400-450 km and an inclination of 51.5 degrees.

Mir space station was in the same orbit with the ISS

51.5° is only about 27 m/s away from 51.6°. Thats pretty much nothing (that you can't compensate).

The longitude of the ascending node matters there, not the inclination.
 
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