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After Mars, ISRO plans Venus odyssey

thesolar65

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Bengaluru: Venus beckons Indian space scientists after their successful outing to Mars, and if everything goes according to plan, a home-grown probe should be cruising towards the brightest and hottest planet in the solar system in about two-and-a-half years in yet another shot at understanding the evolution of the world.

And, this mission to Venus could have a French connection as Prof Jacques Blamont, a renowned astrophysicists and a friend of the late Dr Vikram Sarabhai, who was conferred the Padma Shri this year, has offered to help Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) with gigantic balloons carrying several instruments but designed to pop in and out of the extremely hot atmosphere of the planet after being unfettered from the orbiter.

“It is possible to build and launch the spacecraft in about two-and-a-half years. Dr Adimurthy (who, incidentally, wrote the first feasibility report on the Mars Orbiter Mission) and a big team at Vikram Sarabhai Space Centre, Thiruvananthapuram) are working out all the details like the ideal launch window, the best orbit for the orbiter and the instruments to go onboard,” Prof U R Rao, former chairman of ISRO, and head of the space agency’s Advisory Committee for Space Sciences told Deccan Chronicle.

Prof Rao said ISRO could bank on its workhorse rocket, Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV), which hurled Chandrayaan-I and MOM into space for its outing to Venus as well, but while the probes to Moon and Mars, were fitted with instruments similar to those used on Indian remote sensing satellites, the spacecraft to Venus would carry synthetic aperture radars to gather data about the surface and core of the planet. “Unlike Mars and Moon which could be colonized sooner or later, Venus interests us only because of relevance
in understanding the formation of planets and evolution of the solar system,” he added.

Sources in ISRO said a two-day workshop was held in Bengaluru recently to discuss technological challenges involved in a mission to Venus. “If scientists come forward with the kind of instruments with which they intend to study Venus, we are ready to build the spacecraft. We have reached the Moon and Mars, so we have the confidence that we can arrive at Venus though it will be a slow-and-steady journey,” sources added.

Prof Rao said Prof Blamont met him when he arrived in New Delhi to receive the Padma Shree award and handed over a voluminous report on how gigantic balloons designed by him could be used by ISRO to study the atmosphere of Venus. “We do not have the expertise to make these balloons which are extremely thin but can withstand extreme temperatures. It is entirely up to ISRO take his help or to go alone to Venus. We are waiting for Dr Adimurthy's team to suggest the ideal date for launch of the spacecraft, and
then everything will move to meet the deadline,” he added.

After Mars, ISRO plans Venus odyssey

@Chanakya's_Chant Let's see this time??
 
“Unlike Mars and Moon which could be colonized sooner or later, Venus interests us only because of relevance
in understanding the formation of planets and evolution of the solar system

I really wish to see Indian colonies on Moon and Mars before my time on this planet is up.
 
Last i heard after mars ISRO plans to the Sun. What happand to that mission? ? Any update??
 
Let's not create boundaries even in space.
Naive idealism gets you nothing in life.US and EU already have plans to setup their own colonies,pperhaps China, Russia and Japan too will follow suit while Indians are busy professing their love for all humanity.
 
Naive idealism gets you nothing in life.US and EU already have plans to setup their own colonies,pperhaps China, Russia and Japan too will follow suit while Indians are busy professing their love for all humanity.
And creating meaningless hatred and segregation will take you to the stars?
Plans of US and EU are of making a research centre not a habitable colony or military outpost.Only China has plans of needlessly militarising the moon.
 
And creating meaningless hatred and segregation will take you to the stars?
Plans of US and EU are of making a research centre not a habitable colony or military outpost.Only China has plans of needlessly militarising the moon.
Excuse me ?When did this discussion become about militarization of space?
I merely expressed my hope that India too wil use its expertise in space to create colonies that will benefit Indians in a tangible manner within my lifetime.

You are simply moving the goalposts now that your silly remark doesn't have a leg to stand on.
 
Excuse me ?When did this discussion become about militarization of space?
I merely expressed my hope that India too wil use its expertise in space to create colonies that will benefit Indians in a tangible manner within my lifetime.

You are simply moving the goalposts now that your silly remark doesn't have a leg to stand on.
Colonisation of space should be a joint goal that benefits everyone regardless of nationality.How long do you think it would take for nations to start claiming resource rich parts of planets?
What would start as a scientific and humane endeavour would end up being a great game if nations take this with any other intention other than simple science.
I am sorry if my comments seemed derogatory to you,I profess that was not my intention.I simply want space as a joint endeavour for the benefit of all not as a race to get the planets and stars to claim for individual nation.
 
@Chanakya's_Chant Let's see this time??

Congrats. :enjoy:

First feed your entire population then do that....

Thankfully we have improved a lot in this concern as a result of which Pakistan has more % of starving people than India. India fairs much better than Pakistan in the GHI scores.

trip-png.152541
India winning war against Hunger & Malnutrition as child shunting declines sharply!

India has improved it's score from 30.30 in GHI 1990 to 17.80 in GHI 2014 - with this India now ranks 55th out of 76 countries—ahead of Bangladesh and Pakistan, but behind Nepal and Sri Lanka.
2014 Global Hunger Index—Background Facts and Findings for Asia | International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI)

The number of hungry people in India has fallen to by 9.5 per cent in two decades from 1994 to 2014, but in neighboring Pakistan the number has risen by over 38 per cent in the same period.
No of hungry people in India falling but rising in Pakistan: Report - Economic Times

So maybe Pakistanis should rather focus on feeding their own population first rather than offering unsolicited advice to others? Bloody Hypocrites.
 
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