On a
bright sunny Tuesday afternoon, as millions of Indians, glued to
their television sets watched spell bound, India's giant PSLV rocket
rose majestically from its launch pad on east coast of India,
carrying with it, India's 1350 Kg maiden spacecraft bound for Mars.
About 40 minutes later, mission director announced that the rocket
has placed the Mars orbiter spacecraft into an elliptical orbit
around earth with shortest distance to earth of 350 Km approximately
and longest distance of 23000 Km. Later around 3.50 PM, ISRO
announced that the solar panels on board were deployed successfully.
The
spacecraft was launched exactly at 2.38 PM, because the launch had
to be within time window of exactly 5 minutes from 2.38 p.m. to 2.43
p.m.. If there had been some delay, the launch would have required to
be postponed to next day. Also if there was a postponement, for each
day, the launch time would have to be advanced by 6-9 minutes. There
was also an overall deadline, until November 19, this year. The next
best time was there only after another 26 months.
The
complexities for a mission to Mars are so vast that it can not be
even compared to a normal satellite launch mission. The mission was
set earlier for 26th
of October, but a tracking ship reached its watch post near Fiji late
due to stormy weather and the entire launch had to be delayed.
Considering all eventualities and possible delays, ISRO scientists
had readied their calendar for each of the days on which a launch
was feasible. Since there was just one opportunity on a day. For each
lift-off time, they had kept a new steering programme ready, along
with a new trajectory design.
The
launch of the Mars orbiter is a classic example of Indian ingenuity
of overcoming difficulties that normally would have obvious high cost
and high technology solutions. One of the major problems of any inter
planetary travel from earth, is that the spacecraft requires to
attain a high escape velocity to escape from earths gravitational
force. All previous launches by other countries like US, have used
large rockets with high payload capacities to give this escape
velocity to the spacecraft. India had two problems here. In the first
place ISRO has not yet succeeded in launching it's high payload GSLV
rocket. Just few months back, a leaky valve forced the scientists to
abort the GSLV mission. This means that India simple does not have a
large payload rocket. Secondly with no direct commercial benefits
accruing from a Mars mission, it would have been a tough choice to
use a foreign launch rocket for the mission, which in any case has
prohibitive cost. Just to give a comparison, India's Mars mission,
with a budget of $73 million, is far cheaper than comparable missions
including NASA's $671 million Maven satellite that is expected to set
off for Mars later in November.
To
solve this difficulty, Indian scientists decided to put the
spacecraft into an elliptical orbit around the earth and then speed
it up by firing few bursts of an board engine on the space craft
itself. This would also expand the apogee (longest distance from
earth.) These remaining orbit expansions would all be done around 2
AM on November 7, 9, 11 and 16, until the spacecraft’s apogee
(farthest point from Earth in its elliptical orbit), reaches 1.92
hundred thousand Kilometers. The crucial first orbit raising exercise
would happen on 7th
November at 1.15AM and the last on December 1 at 12.42 AM. At this
point of ime, the spacecraft would be launched into an hyperbolic
trajectory so that it approaches the Martian orbit in a tangential
direction. After about 9 months it would be launched into a Martian
orbit on 24th
September 2014 by slowing down, at a point about 573473 Kilometers
away from surface of Mars after travelling a distance of 422 Million
miles.
In
scientific research, comparisons are futile, yet some western media
were quick to comment that the mission, if successful, would be a
technological leap that would propel India ahead of space rivals
China and Japan in the field of interplanetary exploration. But as
Prof Andrew Coates, from the UK's Mullard Space Science Laboratory,
says and I quote; "I think this mission really brings India to
the table of international space exploration. Interplanetary
exploration is certainly not trivial to do, and [India] has found
some interesting scientific niches to make some measurements in."
Indians
are not really bothered, whether they have shot ahead of a country X
or Y at the moment, they just appear to be rejoicing the glory and
pride of an extra ordinary and proud national moment, even though few
spoil sport, constipated faces are seen questioning the basic purpose of
this mission itself.
6th
November 2013
Forget all about rapes, corruption, pollution, ignorance, unmanageable population. In spite of all that, Now is the time to celebrate India's progress in technology, Those things, looked at from space, where India's future is headed, are too small to be consequential. Forget them. This calls for Jubilation for all people of Indian origin.
ReplyDeleteI can proudly and truthfully say - Mera Bharat Mahan.
It is nice to go through your post on this magnificent achievement of Indian scientists. Thanks and would expect to read your further articles in this regard.
ReplyDeleteMangesh Nabar