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Indian Space Capabilities

Tell me guys, how does it feel to experience something of this magnitude?

The feeling is indeed great & made me feel tremendously proud. But then few in western media press & few more in domestic media cannot relax unless they've soured the celebrations by questioning the need for such space explorations by bringing up the cliched melody of poverty. Otherwise, it has been an elating feeling. Its a tremendous achievement for a struggling but ambitious nation. It only shows that poverty & other social issues shouldn't stand in the way of dreams & desire for you never know when you get to live your dream.
 
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^^

Hey sam thanks a lot I was forgotten to add the description. Added it now
 
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Did u happen to see the ISRO purchase order receipt or the Russian delivery invoice?

Leave it bro. If he cannot appreciate the effort of others, then nothing we say or do will change his opinion. In my language there is a saying, "Kannadachu Irrutakuka" It means "Closing your eyes to make it dark" (prevent yourself seeing what you don't want to see). Thats what he is doing.

India has progressed a lot since the days in 1960s when the space research centre was set up in Thumba. Even the scientists at NASA have lauded our efforts. I don't think anyone should give a f**k about what the critics of the project say. We have done it, and nothing can change that.
 
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i don't need to prove it u proved it already its an imported stuff...btw when is LCA going to be inducted? and also I'm waiting for the ARJUNK too???any more info if these too pieces of metal crap aren't rolled out how in the hell did u even get the capabilities to toss chandababa in the space?lol u don't need to answer me i know its ok its alright we understand i've all sympathy regarding LCA/ARJUNK Its ok to buy imported junk lol.

there are threads in this forum go and read them and ask the question there.

And for your imported ones crap read the post 452
 
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I am loving this....................
American Chronicle | India´s First Moon Mission and the Re-Discovery of ET Artifacts: A Dialogue with Richard C. Hoagland

India´s First Moon Mission and the Re-Discovery of ET Artifacts: A Dialogue with Richard C. Hoagland
Michael Salla



Dr. Michael Salla is an internationally recognized scholar in international politics, conflict resolution, US foreign policy and the new field of 'exopolitics'. He is author/editor of five books; and held academic appointments in the School of International Service& the Center for Global Peace, American University, Washington DC (1996-2004); the Department of Political Science, Australian National University, Canberra, Australia (1994-96); and the Elliott School of International Affairs, George Washington University, Washington D.C., (2002). He has a Ph.D in Government from the University of Queensland, Australia, and an M.A. in Philosophy from the University of Melbourne, Australia. He has conducted research and fieldwork in the ethnic conflicts in East Timor, Kosovo, Macedonia, and Sri Lanka, and organized peacemaking initiatives involving mid to high level participants from these conflicts.


Print Article Michael Salla
November 17, 2008
On November 14, India succeeded in landing a space probe on the surface of the Moon. The probe was launched from an orbiter, Chandrayaan-1 (Sanskrit for moon-vehicle), circling 100 km above the Moon that had reached lunar orbit on November 8. Launched by the Indian Space Research Organization on October 22, Chandrayaan-1 marked India´s first effort to reach the Moon. India joins a small group of nations that have reached the moon, and one of only three nations currently with orbiters around it. Chandrayaan-1 will remain in orbit for two years in order to conduct a comprehensive geological survey of the Moon´s surface. It has already begun supplying high resolution images of the Moon's surface which excites those seeking independent verification of what exactly is on the Moon's surface. .

One of those most excited by the Chandrayaan-1 mission is Richard C. Hoagland who has spent decades analyzing NASA images of the Moon and Mars. In his 2008 book, Dark Mission, Hoagland claimed that NASA, through the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, has systematically covered up or altered satellite imagery data pointing to the existence of extraterrestrial artifacts on both Mars and the Moon. He furthermore pointed out that NASA is subservient to the U.S. Department of Defense (DOD) due to the national security provisions found in NASA's Charter.

I contacted Richard Hoagland to get his opinion about the Chandrayaan-1 mission and its significance for his thesis that extraterrestrial artifacts can be found there. He prefaced his response to my questions by pointing to President-Elect Barack Obama's statement on October 22 where the latter observed: "With India's launch of its first unmanned lunar spacecraft following closely on the heels of China's first spacewalk, we are reminded just how urgently the United States must revitalize its space program if we are to remain the undisputed leader in space, science, and technology."

What follows are Richard Hoagland´s responses (R.H.) to my questions (M.S.).

M.S.: Have you any thoughts on how long the NASA-DOD inspired cover up of extraterrestrial artifacts can continue with India and other nations placing orbiters around the moon and probes on it?


R.H.: If Obama (and those behind him ...) is truly interested in the new Indian Moon mission, as his very public statement strongly implies (McCain made no such public statement, nor did Bush), then Obama must also suspect (or know!) the "why" for India engaging in this totally "non-economic" major domestic expenditure. And, why it is planning on further, far more expensive future lunar missions with the Russians! So, whether the "NASA-DOD cover-up of alien artifacts" will continue during the Obama Administration would seem, in part, to involve Obama's personal knowledge of why the Indians are going to the Moon ... and his related, future plans for some kind of a "new relationship" with Russia (Putin).

Short answer: I think we finally have a shot at some real "disclosure" here -- if for no other reason than, the more that other international "players" are involved (even if they're all controlled by one central "source" -- "the Families") ... the more opportunity for serious new "data leaks" -- planned, or otherwise.

M.S.: How successful will the Indians be in coming up with an independent data base on what's on the moon's surface?

R.H.: The Chandrayaan mission is equipped with sensitive, state-of-the-art high resolution equipment -- cameras, radar, and a unique instrument designed to specifically record instances of "TLP" ("transient lunar phenomenon" -- bright, minutes-long "lights" that have been appearing on the lunar surface for hundreds of years ...) close-up from lunar orbit. We at Enterprise, based on the NASA images, believe that these long-reported "lights" are actually bright, irregular solar reflections from the surviving glass ruins on the Moon seen in those NASA images! We actually have some quite striking examples in the NASA database of such reflections "from the glass!" If that is so, the fact that the Indians have specifically sent an instrument into lunar orbit to study and record this long-standing mysterious phenomenon, could be interpreted as strong foreshadowing of their plans to ultimately, publicly, reveal the source of those reflections -- once they have their own TLP data: ancient glass ruins on the Moon!


M.S.: How do you anticipate NASA/DOD trying to influence what the Indians put up for the public on their future moon database?

R.H.: the Indian government signed a "memo of understanding" with NASA some years ago, over this Indian Moon Mission. As a result, there are a couple of NASA experiments flying on the Chandraayan mission, in addition to the Indian experiments, with JPL scientists involved. However, if the Indian government is planning to reveal "the good stuff," I don't believe NASA will hold much influence in their larger policy objectives. Again, it all depends on agreements much higher up "the food chain," and how much "change" Obama (and the folks behind him ...) REALLY are supporting ... in the run-up to 2012.

M.S.: Do you consider India as a possible contender for informing the world about artifacts on the moon through satellite imagery?

R.H.: Definitely, yes. The Indian Vedas preserve remarkable hints of the ancient, sweeping, high-tech history of all humanity -- from the distant era when both the Moon and Mars (and many other bodies in the solar system) were once inhabited ... by our own great, great, great ancestors. If there is to be "disclosure" of these long hidden truths, there would be no more fitting "messenger" than India ... if they are "allowed" to make them public by other geopolitical forces acting on them at this time. Obama's curious, public "singling out" of India's new Moon mission ... weeks before he was in any position to do anything about it ... is a very intriguing sign of what could happen in the coming months ....


M.S.: Finally, do you anticipate that those behind the secrecy are fully aware of India disclosing the truth about what's on the moon's surface and may try to preempt such a contingency in order not to lose all credibility.

R.H.: That again leads us back to Obama's public reaction vis a vis the Indian Chandraayan Mission, even BEFORE he was elected. I'm cautiously optimistic at this point that "change" is coming. Who will initiate it (us, out of fear of "loss of face" ... or the Indians) is totally up for grabs ... again, if it occurs at all. Allowing India "to do it" has a certain logic behind it. It would give NASA a much-needed "plausible deniability" -- in terms of its own, decades-long NASA data and the cover-up; the Indians just had "better, newer equipment" ... which allowed scientific proof of what was merely hinted at on NASA's ~40-year-old images! As with all other ultimately political decisions, the final decision would seem to depend on how dumb "they" think the rest of us really are ... to buy this type of "Indian revelation." If it comes. Stay tuned. RCH
 
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Hey they will start releasing the pics anytime now. keep a watch on ISRO's site :)
 
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If our great great great ancestors inhabited the moon and mars, why did we have to start off our civilizations by striking two pieces of stone together to create fire? why didnt we just borrow some of their robots and glass buildings?
 
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I am loving this....................
American Chronicle | India´s First Moon Mission and the Re-Discovery of ET Artifacts: A Dialogue with Richard C. Hoagland

India´s First Moon Mission and the Re-Discovery of ET Artifacts: A Dialogue with Richard C. Hoagland
Michael Salla



Dr. Michael Salla is an internationally recognized scholar in international politics, conflict resolution, US foreign policy and the new field of 'exopolitics'. He is author/editor of five books; and held academic appointments in the School of International Service& the Center for Global Peace, American University, Washington DC (1996-2004); the Department of Political Science, Australian National University, Canberra, Australia (1994-96); and the Elliott School of International Affairs, George Washington University, Washington D.C., (2002). He has a Ph.D in Government from the University of Queensland, Australia, and an M.A. in Philosophy from the University of Melbourne, Australia. He has conducted research and fieldwork in the ethnic conflicts in East Timor, Kosovo, Macedonia, and Sri Lanka, and organized peacemaking initiatives involving mid to high level participants from these conflicts.


Print Article Michael Salla
November 17, 2008
On November 14, India succeeded in landing a space probe on the surface of the Moon. The probe was launched from an orbiter, Chandrayaan-1 (Sanskrit for moon-vehicle), circling 100 km above the Moon that had reached lunar orbit on November 8. Launched by the Indian Space Research Organization on October 22, Chandrayaan-1 marked India´s first effort to reach the Moon. India joins a small group of nations that have reached the moon, and one of only three nations currently with orbiters around it. Chandrayaan-1 will remain in orbit for two years in order to conduct a comprehensive geological survey of the Moon´s surface. It has already begun supplying high resolution images of the Moon's surface which excites those seeking independent verification of what exactly is on the Moon's surface. .

One of those most excited by the Chandrayaan-1 mission is Richard C. Hoagland who has spent decades analyzing NASA images of the Moon and Mars. In his 2008 book, Dark Mission, Hoagland claimed that NASA, through the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, has systematically covered up or altered satellite imagery data pointing to the existence of extraterrestrial artifacts on both Mars and the Moon. He furthermore pointed out that NASA is subservient to the U.S. Department of Defense (DOD) due to the national security provisions found in NASA's Charter.

I contacted Richard Hoagland to get his opinion about the Chandrayaan-1 mission and its significance for his thesis that extraterrestrial artifacts can be found there. He prefaced his response to my questions by pointing to President-Elect Barack Obama's statement on October 22 where the latter observed: "With India's launch of its first unmanned lunar spacecraft following closely on the heels of China's first spacewalk, we are reminded just how urgently the United States must revitalize its space program if we are to remain the undisputed leader in space, science, and technology."

What follows are Richard Hoagland´s responses (R.H.) to my questions (M.S.).

M.S.: Have you any thoughts on how long the NASA-DOD inspired cover up of extraterrestrial artifacts can continue with India and other nations placing orbiters around the moon and probes on it?


R.H.: If Obama (and those behind him ...) is truly interested in the new Indian Moon mission, as his very public statement strongly implies (McCain made no such public statement, nor did Bush), then Obama must also suspect (or know!) the "why" for India engaging in this totally "non-economic" major domestic expenditure. And, why it is planning on further, far more expensive future lunar missions with the Russians! So, whether the "NASA-DOD cover-up of alien artifacts" will continue during the Obama Administration would seem, in part, to involve Obama's personal knowledge of why the Indians are going to the Moon ... and his related, future plans for some kind of a "new relationship" with Russia (Putin).

Short answer: I think we finally have a shot at some real "disclosure" here -- if for no other reason than, the more that other international "players" are involved (even if they're all controlled by one central "source" -- "the Families") ... the more opportunity for serious new "data leaks" -- planned, or otherwise.

M.S.: How successful will the Indians be in coming up with an independent data base on what's on the moon's surface?

R.H.: The Chandrayaan mission is equipped with sensitive, state-of-the-art high resolution equipment -- cameras, radar, and a unique instrument designed to specifically record instances of "TLP" ("transient lunar phenomenon" -- bright, minutes-long "lights" that have been appearing on the lunar surface for hundreds of years ...) close-up from lunar orbit. We at Enterprise, based on the NASA images, believe that these long-reported "lights" are actually bright, irregular solar reflections from the surviving glass ruins on the Moon seen in those NASA images! We actually have some quite striking examples in the NASA database of such reflections "from the glass!" If that is so, the fact that the Indians have specifically sent an instrument into lunar orbit to study and record this long-standing mysterious phenomenon, could be interpreted as strong foreshadowing of their plans to ultimately, publicly, reveal the source of those reflections -- once they have their own TLP data: ancient glass ruins on the Moon!


M.S.: How do you anticipate NASA/DOD trying to influence what the Indians put up for the public on their future moon database?

R.H.: the Indian government signed a "memo of understanding" with NASA some years ago, over this Indian Moon Mission. As a result, there are a couple of NASA experiments flying on the Chandraayan mission, in addition to the Indian experiments, with JPL scientists involved. However, if the Indian government is planning to reveal "the good stuff," I don't believe NASA will hold much influence in their larger policy objectives. Again, it all depends on agreements much higher up "the food chain," and how much "change" Obama (and the folks behind him ...) REALLY are supporting ... in the run-up to 2012.

M.S.: Do you consider India as a possible contender for informing the world about artifacts on the moon through satellite imagery?

R.H.: Definitely, yes. The Indian Vedas preserve remarkable hints of the ancient, sweeping, high-tech history of all humanity -- from the distant era when both the Moon and Mars (and many other bodies in the solar system) were once inhabited ... by our own great, great, great ancestors. If there is to be "disclosure" of these long hidden truths, there would be no more fitting "messenger" than India ... if they are "allowed" to make them public by other geopolitical forces acting on them at this time. Obama's curious, public "singling out" of India's new Moon mission ... weeks before he was in any position to do anything about it ... is a very intriguing sign of what could happen in the coming months ....


M.S.: Finally, do you anticipate that those behind the secrecy are fully aware of India disclosing the truth about what's on the moon's surface and may try to preempt such a contingency in order not to lose all credibility.

R.H.: That again leads us back to Obama's public reaction vis a vis the Indian Chandraayan Mission, even BEFORE he was elected. I'm cautiously optimistic at this point that "change" is coming. Who will initiate it (us, out of fear of "loss of face" ... or the Indians) is totally up for grabs ... again, if it occurs at all. Allowing India "to do it" has a certain logic behind it. It would give NASA a much-needed "plausible deniability" -- in terms of its own, decades-long NASA data and the cover-up; the Indians just had "better, newer equipment" ... which allowed scientific proof of what was merely hinted at on NASA's ~40-year-old images! As with all other ultimately political decisions, the final decision would seem to depend on how dumb "they" think the rest of us really are ... to buy this type of "Indian revelation." If it comes. Stay tuned. RCH

With all due respect Nitesh, the article is bullshit.
 
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Moon mission inspires India to launch own version of Google Earth
By CHER THORNHILL
Daily Mail, UK
14th November 2008

Space-hungry India is planning to launch an improved version of Google Earth using its own satellite system, just weeks after conquering the moon.

Its space agency hopes to unveil a prototype of Bhuvan - the Sanskrit for Earth - by December and launch the programme to the public by March.

Officials claim the mapping system will generate clearer images and zoom into a distance of just 10m.

e34d400c12d4ebd75a691296b8dda425.jpg

Sophisticated: 3D Google Earth provides a 3D image of the London Eye

The state-owned service, which will initially cover only India, will be free to use on the web.

'We've created a lot of value added products out of satellite data of the Indian region', Dr. V. Jayaramna, a director at Isra, told the Financial Times.

'We will introduce Bhuvan in phases. Over the next three to four months, the first lot [of map data] will come out and then more in a systematic manner.'

The move comes just weeks after India stepped up its position in the space race with the blast-off of the country's first unmanned space mission to the moon.

a4204fb9cd522ace30d80d3d7b56ac03.jpg

Space contender: India launched Chandralayaan-1, its first unmanned moon mission, in October

Chandrayaan-1, which was built by the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO), will create a 3D map of the lunar surface over two years.

India is following in the footsteps of rival China, after the emerging Asian power celebrated its first space walk in September.

'What we have started is a remarkable journey,' G. Madhavan Nair, chairman of ISRO, said.

Chandrayaan-1 lunar orbiter is expected to mark the achievement tomorrow as it drops a probe, painted in the colours of the Indian flag, on the moon's surface.

9badd486cbdd36d21a1bf7172f0f2cdc.jpg

Earth from space: ISRO s Chandrayaan-1 pictures the Earth on its way to the Moon

But critics argue that India should address the poverty at home before competing with space leaders including China and Japan.

The latest project has sparked speculation that India will develop its own global positioning system, providing for TomTom-like devices for cars.

It is already working towards a satellite-based global aviation navigation system.

And scientists revealed earlier this week that designs for an Aditya spacecraft to study the sun are nearly complete.

Google Earth displays satellite images of varying resolution of the Earth's surface, giving users a bird's eye view of things like houses and cars.
 
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hmm this needs attention too

Slipping satellite, rocket deadlines affect India?s space astronomy - Home - livemint.com

Slipping satellite, rocket deadlines affect India’s space astronomy

The launch deadlines for two experimental projects in astronomy--Tauvex and Astrosat--have been sliding


Bangalore: India’s deep space exploration may have taken off smoothly with the Chandrayaan mission to the moon, but its space astronomy programmes, to explore the stars, galaxies and black holes, are still grounded.

The launch deadlines for two experimental projects in astronomy—Tauvex and Astrosat—have been sliding and scientists tell Mint it’s getting increasingly difficult to keep the small research crew motivated, an issue that has larger ramifications for Indian space science ambitions.


Waiting for lift-off: The set of three UV telescopes of Tauvex. Courtesy: Tauvex Group, Tel Aviv

Tauvex, built by the Israel Space Agency, or ISA, is a set of three wide field ultraviolet, or UV, telescopes to be sent into the earth’s orbit aboard GSAT-4, India’s next communication satellite, which will be launched by the Geosynchronous Satellite Launch Vehicle, or GSLV.
While signing the agreement in December 2003, ISA and Indian Space Research Organisation, or Isro, had said Tauvex would be launched in 2005. The launch date then slipped to mid-2008 and then to April-May 2009.
The hardware, ready to be hurled into space, is sitting in a clean room in Israel for the last two years while the software, too, is stacked up at the Indian Institute of Astrophysics, or IIA, here in Bangalore.
While the instrument is losing sensitivity, it’s also very difficult to keep the group motivated when such delays happen, says Jayant Murthy, Tauvex’s Indian investigator at IIA.
His Israeli counterpart and principal investigator, Noah Brosch at Tel Aviv University, says he is “angry and dismayed” at the delay.
“Astronomy is a competitive science and our main competition comes from the US telescope Galex, which was launched in 2003,” says Brosch, who believes that with passing months, Tauvex is increasingly losing out to Galex on UV discoveries. “The loss is in the discovery space; there are now less discoveries to be made, because Galex already cornered some,” he says. The team is, however, shifting its scientific goalposts to maximize returns.

But it’s not just Tauvex, which is one of several payloads to go on GSAT-4—a flight that is going to test Isro-developed cryogenic engine—but space astronomy at large that is suffering from a lack of focus and shifting deadlines.
“GSAT-4 has many developmental projects which, in any case, take long,” argues P. Sreekumar, head of space astronomy and instrumentation at Isro Satellite Centre. But he believes Astrosat has been delayed, among other things, due to a lack of focus. “All academics are trained to work as an individual, not as a team…it’s very difficult to make them work with engineers.”

Initially, Astrosat was supposed to be launched in 2005-06 by the Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV); then it shifted to late 2008 and, now, to early 2010.
“Scientists have really squandered away the fantastic opportunity given to them…we are looking at it as a sideproject,” says Sreekumar. There is no such science mission on the anvil globally and if India delays too much, then it’ll lose its competitiveness and hold on the intended science, he notes.
Unlike most Isro missions where the payloads are largely developed by its umbrella organizations, Astrosat payloads are developed by three institutes: Tata Institute of Fundamental Research in Mumbai, IIA in Bangalore, and Inter University Centre for Astronomy and Astrophysics, or IUCAA, in Pune.
Together they are building instruments that would enable multi-wavelength observations of stellar objects in optical, ultraviolet and X-ray wavelengths. This complexity, says S.N. Tandon of IUCAA, justifying the delay, “has required our laboratories to take on new developments in technology”.
Murthy says some years were lost in dealing with “institutional bureaucracy” which delayed release of funds for instruments, one-tenth of the Rs400 crore Astrosat budget. “We lost four years in formal clearances, then there was change of guard at various places…,” recalls Murthy, who, after 20 years in the US, came to IIA from Johns Hopkins University in 1999 for Astrosat. Now, he says, his UV instruments won’t be ready before early 2010.
Isro, besides building PSLV, is also putting together an experimental payload to scan the sky for X-rays, which Sreekumar says would be ready in six months.
“Anywhere else a programme like Astrosat would have at least 10 PhD students, but I have only one and others don’t have any,” adds Sreekumar. People don’t understand that science experiments, unlike engineering, are new and provide an excellent training ground, Sreekumar says, who isn’t getting students to work on Aditya, Isro’s solar mission, either.
Why can’t Chandrayaan’s success be replicated? Experts say while the moon mission is much grander in scope, it had an “emotional spin” that helped people work together. Moreover, all the payloads were under Isro’s control.
“While, as scientists, we don’t like being pushed, Chandryaan had tremendous external pressure, which I think is sometimes necessary (for timely completion of projects),” says J.N. Goswami, principal scientist of Chandrayaan.
 
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The Indians have landed | The Australian


The Indians have landed

A FLAWLESS 23-day Indian space mission has made a hard lunar landing, planting a flag symbolising the country's growing technical, economic and industrial might.



Chandrayaan-1 blasts off from the Satish Dhawan Space Centre near Chennai late last month

It is the first stage in India's ambition to put a man on the moon by 2020, four years before China aimed to become the second nation, after the US in the late 1960s and early '70s, to complete a manned mission.

The probe's mothership Chandrayaan-1 (Sanskrit for mooncraft) remains in orbit where Japanese and Chinese satellites already circle, each vying to boost national pride. Chandrayaan's success has stoked India's ego.

For Indian Space Research Organisation chairman Madhavan Nair, the mission has proved "very productive and fruitful". "We have also emerged as a low-cost travel agency to space," he says.

It is not just a landmark for the ISRO, which has launched dozens of satellites since it was founded in 1969, but had never before sent an object beyond Earth's orbit. The successful mission catapults India into an elite club: the US, Russia, Japan and China are the only other countries capable of independently reaching the moon (the European Space Agency has also sent a satellite into moon orbit).

It also marks the beginning of what some experts describe as a 21st-century Asian version of the space race between the US and the Soviet Union.

India is competing with China and Japan - Asia's two dominant powers - to send a man to the moon. Even South Korea has an ambitious space program.


"In the 20th century the race to the moon was fought between the erstwhile Cold War adversaries," says Pallava Bagla, author of Destination Moon, a history of ISRO.

"In the 21st century those gladiators have been left behind and the Asian nations, on the upsurge, have decided to take their place.

"Chandrayaan is a scientific mission, but it also has implications for global geopolitics. It's like a coming-out party for India."

The setting for the historic launch was the Satish Dhawan Space Centre, built in 1971 on Sriharikota Island, about 100km north of Chennai, and now surrounded by a bird sanctuary. The entrance looks much like that of any other Indian government compound: a couple of nonchalant policemen, a dirty tea shop, a few stray dogs. Only the two model rockets hint at the futuristic activity within.

Scientists and engineers clapped and hugged each other when news of the hard landing last Friday was transmitted to mission control along with video pictures of the event. Hundreds of millions more Indians watched live television coverage.

Chandrayaan took several days to travel 385,000km through space before reaching its final position 100km above the moon's surface. It spent 10 days in orbit before firing the lander to the surface, the Indian flag painted on its casing. The lander is thought to have settled in a crater near the south pole.

The mothership will orbit the moon for two years, using high-resolution remote sensing to compile, for the first time, a three-dimensional atlas of its surface and analyse its composition. "This is a historic moment for India," Nair says. "What we have started is a remarkable journey ... to unravel the mysteries of the moon."

On board are 11 instruments: five from ISRO and six from foreign agencies, including NASA and the ESA. ISRO is footing the bill for the mission and will have access to all data from the experiments in an unprecedented example of international co-operation in space.

The results could reveal whether the moon contains enough water and helium-3 (a potential energy source rare on Earth) to sustain human life.

"Man has to go to the moon," says T.K. Alex, head of ISRO's satellite centre. "If something happens to Earth, a natural or man-made disaster, we may also need a colony on Mars."

The idea of colonising the moon, let alone Mars, marks a huge strategic shift for India, which has previously focused on cheaper projects with more earthly applications.

India's modern space program was conceived by Jawaharlal Nehru, its first prime minister, as a peaceful way to lift the country out of poverty. ISRO has concentrated on civilian projects with social or industrial benefits, laying the foundations of India's recent information technology boom.

Today India has 16 satellites in orbit, supporting telecommunications, TV broadcasting, earth observation, weather forecasting, remote education and health care.

Because of an early shortage of funds it also boasts the world's most efficient space program, generating income from spacecraft sales and commercial satellite launches.

Now ISRO has far more ambitious and expensive plans. The Government has approved a second unmanned lunar mission, Chandrayaan-2, that will land a rover on the moon by 2010-12. ISRO is also planning to put its first Indian astronaut into orbit by 2014-16, depending on when the Government approves the $2.4 billion budget. It has already announced plans to land a man on the moon by 2020.

The public response to the plans appears to reflect the gulf between India's consumer class of 50 million to 100 million people and the rest of the population of 1.1billion. Poorer Indians tend to say the money should be spent on fighting poverty in a country where 800 million people live on less than $3 a day and 47 per cent of children under three are malnourished.

"Will going to the moon help me to stop pedalling this?" asks Pappu Tiwari, 34, who pulls a cycle rickshaw in Delhi, supporting a wife and four children on little more than 2000 rupees ($60) a month.

"To me this space exploration is nothing but a gimmick."

Wealthy and middle-class professionals generally respond that the country lacks good governance, rather than money, and that the space program benefits Indian industry.

"Poverty and hunger will always remain," says Rajeev Kapoor, 48, a salesman from Delhi who supports his wife and two children on about 6000 rupees a month.

"By the time the Government would try to eradicate them completely, the world itself would have vanished."

There is, however, a new impetus for India's lunar ambitions. Mao Zedong initiated China's space program in 1958 with specific military applications in mind and placed it under the purview of the People's Liberation Army.

That head start, combined with a 30-year economic boom, means China is years ahead of India on several fronts, as demonstrated in a series of recent breakthroughs. China put its first astronaut in space in 2003, shot down a satellite and launched a lunar orbiter in 2007, and conducted the first space walk by a Chinese astronaut last month. Beijing plans to land a man on the moon by 2024.

Indian officials insist they are not racing with China, but they have eyed it with suspicion ever since Chinese forces easily prevailed in a brief border war in 1962. Last year India's army chief spoke in public for the first time of his fears about China's military space program and the need for India to accelerate its own.

Other Asian powers have also been spurred into action by China's recent success and by North Korea's claim to have tested a nuclear bomb in 2006. Japan launched a new unmanned lunar orbiter last year, has plans for an unmanned moon lander in 2012-13, and is considering putting a man on the moon by 2025. South Korea accelerated its space program in 2004 by teaming up with Russia to develop a space port and a satellite launch vehicle, due for completion this year.

"There's an element of rivalry, but each country has a mix of motivations," says Bates Gill, director of the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute. "It's a combination of national prestige and the spin-offs for technology. The third aspect is the military one. The ultimate high ground: space."

This new space race differs from the Cold War because of the lack of ideology and the international co-operation needed for expensive projects such as Mars missions, experts say. "Space is a global enterprise," says Henry R. Hertzfeld from George Washington University's Space Policy Institute.

Some foresee a golden era of global co-operation. NASA plans to send astronauts to the moon again by 2020 and to build a permanent base there. Russia aims to have one by 2028-32. If all plans come to fruition, the moon is going to be a little crowded.

Nevertheless, most experts agree that space exploration continues to be as much about politics as about science, and a few see trouble over the horizon.

China, India, Japan, Russia and the US publicly oppose the weaponisation of space, but all are developing space technology with potential military applications.

And India is the only country with a lunar program to have signed the 1979 UN Moon Agreement, which bans ownership of lunar resources. None has yet ratified it.

"There is a window over the next 10 to 15 years for countries to think about a resource race in space," Gill says. "It's not too early to think about what these countries might do that could avoid conflict in the future."

The Times and agencies
 
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