InQube, India's first open-source satellite, will launch this month.

Onkar Batra, a 12th-standard student at BSF Senior Secondary School Jammu, announced that Indias first open-source satellite InQube, which was developed by him, will be launched this month . InQube, which weighs one kilogram, was developed with the help of nanotechnology .

Onkar Batra, a 12th-standard student at BSF Senior Secondary School Jammu who has added another feather, announced that India's first open-source satellite InQube, which was developed by him, will be launched this month with the support of the Indian Space Research Agency.InQube, which weighs one kilogram, was developed with the help of nanotechnology, According to Onkar Batra Neb.He said that many universities and researchers in other countries are doing such research, and that they decided to launch it in space with the help of India's ISRO group.The cost of its development in India is Rs 20-80 lakhs, while in other countries it is in crores.Every satellite launched into space has a special mission, he said.

One aspect is about whether such a lightweight satellite will survive in space, the other is about the temperature there, to help researchers determine what the weather is like and how difficult it is to launch a satellite in space.The product should be used cautionively.Onkar Batra, who is also the CEO of Batra Technology, was awarded the National Ball Shakti Award by the President of India, Ram Nath Kond, for bringing together an interactive website for Covid-19.With the help of doctors, the Government Medical College Jammu developed the Quaidcare website, in which about fifty people could reach a doctor at once, and Onkar Batra set the first website up when he was seven years old and became the World's Youngest Webmaster (male).He became the world's youngest literary author when the clock ticked up to 12, and in his book When The Time Comes, he became the world's youngest literary author.

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