What's new

Indian Space Capabilities

I am eagerly waiting for the moon mission (this year) and the planned manned-mission (7 year plan, I believe).

Now is the time for India to get ambitious in the space arena. The basic building blocks are in place. Sky is the limit now, literally. ;)

No. The moon is the limit!
This is one field where we need to catch up. But I think its too late, a bit like the LCA.
 
.
Satellites beam quality images

Special Correspondent

CHENNAI: The cameras on board Cartosat-2A and the Indian Mini Satellite (IMS-1), which were launched by a Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV-C9) on Monday, have started sending pictures of some States and the quality of the images was “excellent,” according to a press release from the Indian Space Research Organisation.

The PSLV-C9 also put eight foreign nano satellites in accurate orbits. The telemetry data received indicated that all the sub-systems of the Indian satellites were normal.

The multispectral camera on board the IMS-1 was switched on the previous day and it transmitted a high quality image covering a wide swathe from Allahabad in Uttar Pradesh to Rameswaram in Tamil Nadu.

On Wednesday, the hyperspectral camera on the IMS-1 and the panchromatic camera on Cartosat-2A were switched on.

The images from the IMS-1 covered Uttarakhand to Karnataka, passing through New Delhi and Bhopal.

The images from the Cartosat-2A covered strips of land from Saharanpur in Uttar Pradesh to Nuh (south of Delhi) and Sangli in Maharashtra to the Goa coast. “The quality of the images received at the National Remote-Sensing Agency, Hyderabad, was excellent.”

The release said the launch of PSLV-C9 was a milestone for ISRO as it again proved the reliability and versatility of the PSLV and its ability to put satellites in different types of orbits.

The Hindu : National : Satellites beam quality images
 
.
Your assumption is probably correct. One can purchase maps from google earth for most purposes anyway.

IMO google earth isn't exactly useful for intelligence purposes.

Intelligence agencies need up-to-date photos, not pictures that might be anywhere between 2-5 years old, and low resolution.
 
.
ISRO to launch moon mission by December
Thursday, 22 May , 2008, 17:44

Kolkata: The Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) plans to launch its first unmanned moon mission, Chandrayaan-I, between October and December, a top official said in Kolkata on Thursday.

"We are hopeful of launching the spacecraft in the third quarter of 2008-09. The mission would be targeted to capture images of the lunar surface," ISRO chairman G Madhavan Nair told reporters during an interactive session in Kolkata.


"The objectives of the Chandrayaan-I mission are to carry out high resolution mapping of topographic features in 3-D and to harness the science payloads, the lunar craft and the launch vehicle with suitable ground support systems," he added.


The lunar craft would not be landing, but will travel in a polar orbit around the moon and pay special attention to gathering data on the polar icecaps that may contain traces of water.

"It would take at least two years for the spacecraft to cover the entire lunar surface," Nair said.

Talking about ISRO's future plans, he said: "After launching Chandrayaan-I, we are planning to launch a Geosynchronous Satellite Launch Vehicle (GSLV) with an indigenous cryogenic engine. All preliminary testing has already been completed and it's expected to be launched by the end of this fiscal (March 2009)."

"We are planning to launch 70 missions in the 11th Five Year Plan period (2007-12). The number of missions would be three times what we have done in the past five years," Nair said.


Nair was in town to receive the Raja Rammohan Puraskar, 2008 for his outstanding contributions to the development of space technology and its application.

He said that ISRO's Regional Remote Sensing Centre (RRSC) that is located in Kharagpur in West Midnapore would soon be shifted to Kolkata.

"The West Bengal government has already given a piece of land at Salt Lake and the construction work has also started. We are expecting the centre to be operational by next year," he said.

http://sify.com/news/scienceandmedicine/fullstory.php?id=14679248
 
. .
The Hindu : National : Mars mission possible before 2015

Mars mission possible before 2015

R. Ramachandran
Ambitious space missions drawn up by ISRO’s Advisory Committee
Chandrayaan-1 will be launched by mid-2008

Chandrayaan-2 launch expected in 2012

Udhagamandalam: After the Moon, it could be Mars before 2015 for the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) if the ambitious space missions drawn up by ISRO’s Advisory Committee for Space (ADCOS) up to the year 2020 are realised in the envisaged time frame. This was disclosed here by Prof. U.R. Rao, former Chairman of ISRO and currently Chairman of ADCOS, in his inaugural address at the four-day 15th National Space Science Symposium (NSSS-2008) which got underway on Tuesday.

It was on the basis of the recommendations made by ADCOS that the first lunar mission Chandrayaan-1, which will be an orbiter-cum-impactor mission, and the multi-wavelength X-ray astronomical satellite ASTROSAT have been undertaken by ISRO.

Chandrayaan-1, originally scheduled for an April launch window, is now postponed by a few months and will be launched by mid-2008. The mission is chiefly aimed at understanding the chemistry and mineralogy of the lunar surface. It comprises 11 instrument payloads, which include five indigenous experiments, two joint experiments of ISRO with external agencies and the remaining four wholly foreign.

According to ISRO sources, four of the payloads have been totally integrated with the lunar satellite and the remaining are in various stages of integration. ASTROSAT is expected to be launched in 2009.

ADCOS, Prof. Rao said, had recently constituted four major panels on Planetary Exploration, Astronomy and Astrophysics, Space Weather and Weather and Climate Science. In recent months the deliberations of these panels have resulted in the identification of candidate future scientific missions on the basis of which the Committee has drawn up a perspective plan up to the year 2020, that also includes programmes for the Eleventh Five Year Plan period 2007-2012, he said. The exercises of defining these missions are likely to be taken up in due course.

The identified missions include Chandrayaan-2, which ADCOS envisages to be a lunar orbiter mission again but this time with the possibility of including a lander-rover and robotic instruments to carry out, if possible, in situ analyses of lunar samples. Studies related to this mission are already on and Chandrayaan-2 is expected to be launched by 2012. Prof. Rao, in fact, expected this to be followed by more lunar missions.

Some other important future scientific missions that ADCOS has identified include:

A Mars Orbiter, to be taken up in the time frame 2009-2015, for the exploration of Mars with regard to the effect of solar wind, studies of its surface magnetic field, and search for palaeo-water; Asteroid orbiter or comet fly-by during the time frame 2009-2017, with the near-earth asteroid as the primary target; Space-borne solar coronograph by 2012 in the visible and infrared.

A twin-satellite mission is planned to probe the electromagnetic field of the near-earth space during 2008-2010; small satellites carrying primary payloads such as (a) a nadir-viewing multi-angle polarisation imager and multi-spectral sensor; (b) payload for measuring vertical distribution of aerosols; and, (c) IR spectrometer for measuring atmospheric trace gases by 2010.

Besides the small satellite scientific mission solar coronograph mentioned above, several other small satellite missions have also been proposed for the period beyond 2010.

As for the upcoming near-term scientific missions besides Chandrayaan-1, there is the Indo-Russian mission called RT-2, aimed at hard X-ray spectrometry and imaging, which will be flown aboard the Russian launcher Photon-Coronas and is scheduled be launched this year.

The other is the Indo-Israeli mission called TAUVEX, a UV imaging satellite, which will be launched along with GSAT-4 aboard ISRO’s launcher GSLV. This is also scheduled for launch in 2008.

With increasing scientific missions, where instrument design and fabrication is a critical area, a dedicated Space Science Instrumentation Facility (SSIF) is also proposed to be established shortly as a separate wing of ISRO.
 
. . .
Moon mission launch in September: ISRO-India-The Times of India

Moon mission launch in September: ISRO
10 Jun 2008, 0328 hrs IST,TNN


BANGALORE: The wait for Mission Moon just got a little longer. A crucial meeting of the senior scientists at Isro's Satellite Centre has decided that the moon mission could blast off in September. Weather conditions will also determine the precise launch date.

Scientists took stock of work preparedness and tasks to be completed. While assembly and integration of instruments to the Chandrayaan spacecraft is on at the integration centre, the Byalalu centre of Isro is humming with activity.

A 32-metre diameter antenna at Byalalu is being tested to receive signals from deep space. As India does not have deep space satellites, it has sought services of such satellites from a third country.

"We are putting the antenna to work to see how it receives and communicates signals from such satellites. The country knows well that we are using data from their satellites. It is with their permission that we can go ahead with such work," an official said.

The Deep Space Network at Byalalu is receiving signals from deep space satellites for the first time. Its performance over the next few weeks will determine what modifications may have to be effected in time for the Chandrayaan mission.

The antenna is powerful enough even to handle missions to Mars and beyond.
 
.
^^^Huh..the last reports said it was between Oct and Dec? Isn't that an advancement of date?
 
.
.
Moon mission a waste of money. I think the world should co-operate in outer space and India and China and any other country that wishes should all work together.

Regards

You're kidding right?

Moon mission is a lot of things. One thing it isn't, is a waste of money.
 
.
You're kidding right?

Moon mission is a lot of things. One thing it isn't, is a waste of money.

Why do you feel I am kidding. There is no point in re-inventing the wheel. India, China are third world countries with massive third world problems.

Also remember any threat comming from outerspace concerns the whole world. If the world can combine on cold fusion to save money why not in outerspace.

Please tell me what the benefits are for India in the moon program.

Regards
 
.
Why do you feel I am kidding. There is no point in re-inventing the wheel. India, China are third world countries with massive third world problems.

Yeah, dude, we live in the real world. Not in some fairyland where everyone shares everything and lives happily ever after.

India, China and the third world are countries with massive third world problems, and therfore need massive investment in science and technology in order to catch up with the first world.

Do you have any idea of the effect a successful moon mission will have on the people of the country?
It will be a source of inspiration and pride for everybody in the Indian middle class.

It will encourage students to take up science. It go a long way in removing the cobwebs of underachievement from the minds of people.

The Chinese, Russians are no fools to spend millions on manned space missions.

Besides, any world power in the 21st century needs to have a viable space program. Space might well be the next frontier.

Also remember any threat comming from outerspace concerns the whole world. If the world can combine on cold fusion to save money why not in outerspace.

I don't know. Ask the Chinese government.

BTW, ISRO and NASA are collaborating in this project. NASA is supplying a wide range of scientific instruments, and the data is being shared.

By your logic, why should India reinvent anything? Why make LCA when we can buy planes from the Russians or Americans? Why build tanks when we can buy? Why spend millions on research in universities when we can "cooperate" with the americans and get all the latest tech?
 
.
India, China and the third world are countries with massive third world problems, and therfore need massive investment in science and technology in order to catch up with the first world.

Do you have any idea of the effect a successful moon mission will have on the people of the country?
It will be a source of inspiration and pride for everybody in the Indian middle class. It will encourage students to take up science. It go a long way in removing the cobwebs of underachievement from the minds of people.

Why not use the millions to build some world class universities ?

UK, Japan, S Korea, France, Germany all co-operate in Space without having individual space progarmmes ?

I can add 50 more countries who much more advanced then India and China who also donot feel the need to go for a moon mission to motivate their citizens. Also I have no qualms in accepting that asian brain is today probably more hungry for knowledge then the EU brain so there is no need to spend millions on something already done.

Regards
 
.

Pakistan Affairs Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom