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Chandrayaan 1
1.
2. Chandrayaan-1, India's first mission to Moon, was launched
successfully on October 22, 2008 from SDSC SHAR, Sriharikota.
Budget : ₹386 crores.
The spacecraft was orbiting around the Moon at a height of 100
km from the lunar surface.
The spacecraft carried 11 scientific instruments built in India,
USA, UK, Germany, Sweden and Bulgaria.
Introduction
3. The idea of undertaking an Indian scientific mission to Moon was
initially mooted in a meeting of the Indian Academy of Sciences in
1999 that was followed up by discussions in the Astronautical
Society of India in 2000.
Prime minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee announced the Chandrayaan-
1 project on course in his Independence Day speech on 15 August
2003.
Government of India approved ISRO's proposal for the first Indian
Moon Mission, called Chandrayaan-1 in November 2003.
Background
4. Objectives
The Chandrayaan-1 mission performed high-resolution remote
sensing of the moon in visible, near infrared (NIR), low energy X-
rays and high-energy X-ray regions.
One of the objectives was to prepare a three-dimensional atlas
of both near and far side of the moon.
It aimed at conducting chemical and mineralogical mapping of
the entire lunar surface for distribution of mineral and chemical
elements.
5. Launch Vehicle
Chandrayaan-1 was launched aboard PSLV C-11 which was one of
world's most reliable launchers. PSLV was later used to launch the
Mars Orbiter Mission in 2013.
PSLV-C11 was an updated version of ISRO’s PSLV standard
configuration. Weighing 320 tonne at lift-off, the vehicle used larger
strap-on motors to achieve higher payload capability.
PSLV is the trusted workhorse launch Vehicle of ISRO. During
September 1993 - April 2008 period, PSLV had twelve consecutively
successful launches. On October 22, 2008, its fourteenth flight
launched Chandrayaan-1 spacecraft.
6.
7. SPECIFICATIONS
Mass
• 1,380 kg at launch, 675 kg at lunar orbit, and 523 kg after releasing
the impactor.
Power
• The spacecraft was mainly powered by its solar array, which included one
solar panel covering a total area of 2.15 × 1.8 m generating 750 W of peak
power, which was stored in a 36 A·h lithium-ion battery for use during
eclipses.
Onboard power 700 Watts.
8. Chandrayaan spacecraft was a cube of side 1.5 m and
was based on the I-1-K bus which was used in the IRS
series of satellites.
It also carried the Moon Impact Probe which landed
on the moon on November 14, 2009.
Spacecraft
9. Prior to Chandrayaan's launch, the Indian Deep Space Network
(IDSN) was developed, which was a mission requirement. IDSN
comprises of a 32 m and an 18 m diameter antennas located at
Byalalu.
ISRO Telemetry Tracking and Command Network (ISTRAC) will be
providing support of the TTC ground stations, communications
network between ground stations and control center.
Ground Segment
10.
11. Mission timeline
During the tenure Prime
Minister Manmohan
Singh Chandrayaan
project got a boost.
Chandrayaan-1 was sent to the Moon in a
series of orbit-increasing manoeuvres
around the Earth over a period of 21 days.
At launch the spacecraft was
inserted into geostationary
transfer orbit (GTO)
For the duration of the
mission, (ISTRAC)
at Peenya in Bangalore,
tracked and controlled
Chandrayaan-1.
12. END OF THE MISSION
• Mission expected to operate for two years.
• But, 28 August 2009 communication with the spacecraft was suddenly lost.
• Although the mission was less than 10 months in duration, and less than half
the intended two years in length, a review by scientists termed the mission
successful, as it had completed 95% of its primary objectives.
• The probe had operated for 312 days.
13. Results
Chandrayaan's NASA Instrument Moon Mineralogy
Mapper has confirmed the magma ocean hypothesis,
meaning that the Moon was once completely molten.
LLRI covered both the lunar poles and additional lunar
regions of interest.
HEX made about 200 orbits over the lunar poles and
Mini-SAR provided complete coverage of both North and
South Polar Regions of the Moon.
14. Lunar water discovery
On 24 September 2009, Science journal reported that
the Nasa Instrument Moon Mineralogy Mapper (M3) on
Chandrayaan-1 had detected water ice on the Moon.
But, on 25 September 2009, ISRO announced that the MIP,
another instrument on board Chandrayaan-1, had discovered
water on the Moon just before impact and had discovered it 3
months before NASA's M3.
The announcement of this discovery was not made until NASA
confirmed it.
15.
16. ISRO’s Team
G. Madhavan Nair – Chairman, Indian Space Research Organisation
T. K. Alex – Director, ISAC (ISRO Satellite Centre)
Mylswamy Annadurai – Project Director, Chandrayan-1
S. K. Shivkumar – Director – Telemetry, Tracking and Command Network
M. Pitchaimani – Operations Director, Chandrayan-1 & many others
17. Awards
The American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA) has
selected ISRO's Chandrayaan-1 mission as one of the recipients of
its annual AIAA SPACE 2009 awards.
The International Lunar Exploration Working Group awarded the
Chandrayaan-1 team.
US-based National Space Society awarded ISRO the 2009 Space
Pioneer Award in the science and engineering category, for the
Chandrayaan-1 mission.