Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Trouble is those who are laughing are most probably not even in the race.I laughed as others few members but, credit where it is due, they sent something around Mars. The race is ongoing and not finished yet.
We should stay humble.
I laughed as others few members but, credit where it is due, they sent something around Mars. The race is ongoing and not finished yet.
We should stay humble.
Lets see :
Mars Exospheric Neutral Composition Analyser (MENCA) which is a mass analyzer
Here are its results :
Error - Cookies Turned Off
agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com
MCC
Estimation of dust variability and scale height of atmospheric optical depth (AOD) in the Valles Marineris on Mars by Indian Mars Orbiter Mission (MOM) data
In this paper analyses of bright hazes observed inside Valles Marineris formed during mid-southern spring of Mars is presented. The analysis is perfor…www.sciencedirect.com
Methane Sensor for Mars
Thermal Infrared Imaging Spectrometer
If you bothered to read the article.
There is no credit due this is the same story as JF-17 vs Tejas. Do you want to waste money reinventing the wheel and get laughed at for producing a trash can or create something that works and delivers results?
Bro, if I understood correctly, JF17 was for an immediate issue (pressler?). In our case yes JF17 was a success by not reinventing wheels. What was acceptable and what wasn’t was known by our Project Management. I don’t know what were the goals of tejas. I can’t judge
But in the case of Mars, the goal is not an immediate needs. It’s a long term journey.
I would have liked too that we sent some items to Mars by our own.
I don't see why Pakistan should do that when the standard of living there is so low. Do you know how many Americans hate the space program even though they are so much better off? I see no point in wasting resources when they are already so tight especially if the results are just going to be trash.
Bro, if I understood correctly, JF17 was for an immediate issue (pressler?). In our case yes JF17 was a success by not reinventing wheels. What was acceptable and what wasn’t was known by our Project Management. I don’t know what were the goals of tejas. I can’t judge
But in the case of Mars, the goal is not an immediate needs. It’s a long term journey.
I would have liked too that we sent some items to Mars by our own.
Why??
Why waste money on a orbiter lol?? It creates no real value other than to say...WE DID IT!
It would be much much more useful to put all that effort into developing reusable spacecrafts and rockets like SpaceX is doing......their goal is to reach Mars too but they ain't sending random shitty probes to Mars lol.....they're building from the ground up and making money doing it. Way more than any Indian venture ever will. Not only are they serving commercial needs but more importantly, military ones too.
I would like Pakistan to follow SpaceX'es lead.....like China is doing too (they just had their 1st reusable rocket test).
The goal is to establish ourselves around the Earth's orbit, then the moon and then maybe, maybe Mars......India skipped parts 1 and 2 and celebrated a shitty run at part 3.....lets not do that.
Indeed I have. And yes in space tech sometimes things don't work, its great that ISRO was able to salvage it for its another use.If you bothered to read the article.
Oh?.forgetting that current India doesn't need "Space tech"
Lemme ask one thing. Since Pakistan does not have a real space program anyways. I am sure Pakistan's infra will be much better than India, isnt it?.it needs better infrastructure, more jobs and less ways of sinking money into costly projects
You know what americans hate a lot? Paying taxes. At all.Do you know how many Americans hate the space program even though they are so much better off?
You do know that SpaceX is built upon lots of innovation that NASA did back during the space race. Had there been no NASA there would have been no SpaceX. And yes, there were lots of space missions with no immediate benefits.It would be much much more useful to put all that effort into developing reusable spacecrafts and rockets like SpaceX is doing