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India's Surprise Shooting Down Of A Satellite Was A Warm-Up To Its Imminent Mission To Land On Moon

LOL your daddy is scolding you for carrying out destruction in space. Don’t bark at the messenger. America is India’s daddy after all.

LOL Keep playing the Yanks. You both deserve each other. Eventually Yankee patience will run out. Right now they are nodding and noting down names. Let things proceed. You’ll find out in time.

Remember the Yankee always backstabs. That is the nature of the beast.

We ain't pakistan to let someone dictate our policies..

FYI India will be joining USA,Russia and China to decide on space policies...

You better keep quiet and let people think you are an idiot rather than speak and prove it
 
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Sorry, I don't know the capacity of your rockets.

ISRO's second moon mission ( Chandrayaan 2 ) will use the GSLV Mark III rocket :

https://www.isro.gov.in/gslv-mk-iii-chandrayaan-2-mission

https://www.isro.gov.in/launchers/gslv-mk-iii

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geosynchronous_Satellite_Launch_Vehicle_Mark_III

It certainly is no small endeavor to launch anything of significant weight to the moon.

Agreed.

Even the highly funded Chinese rovers are small (1.5m × 1.0m × 1.0 m, 140kg)

Thanks for the info.
 
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This ASAT has capability to shoot down any satellite up to polar orbit i.e upto 850 Km.
 
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This is to compensate for losing the dogfight to Pakistan. As usual India is always fighting the last battle.
 
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Jamie Carter

Contributor
Opinions expressed by Forbes Contributors are their own.
I write about science and nature, stargazing and eclipses.Science Editor at New Delhi Television. "Asia is where you will see more missions coming (and) I am very excited about seeing the Indian mission on the near side, and the Chinese mission on the far side, both giving us data that will enhance our understanding of the lunar geology and lunar evolutionary history."





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Chandrayaan-2 will look for traces of water near the moon's south pole.

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What is Chandrayaan-2?

A lunar orbiter, lunar lander and lunar rover mission, Chandrayaan-2 will launch from the Satish Dhawan Space Center in Sriharikota, Andhra Pradesh on a GSLV Mark III rocket sometime in April (though there have been significant delays so don't rely on it happening during April). Chandrayaan-2 was initially supposed to be a joint mission with Russia but plans changed and Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) had to construct its own lander. Once that lander and a six-wheeled rover (which is called Vikram) are on the surface, the mission will have just one lunar day (14 Earth days) to do its work. Since all the equipment is solar-powered, that makes it likely that Chandrayaan-2 will land on or near the date of a full moon, possibly May 18 or June 17, 2019.

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Chandrayaan-2 will carry laser retroreflector arrays owned by NASA to help astronomers measure the exact distance between Earth and the Moon.

Why is Chandrayaan-2 so exciting?

Chandrayaan-2 is aiming to land in an area of the moon's near side that is thought to contain water ice, which India's previous moon orbiter Chandrayaan-1 helped detect for the first time in 2008. "This will be the first time any country is attempting to land on the near side of the moon on the south pole," says Bagla. "To date, all landings on the near side of the moon have been in the equatorial region, including all the Apollo missions."

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Chandrayaan-1, India's first unmanned mission to the Moon, is seen as it is unveiled at the Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO) Satellite Center in Bangalore, India prior to launch in 2008. (AP Photo/File)

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What did Chandrayaan-1 do?

Chandrayaan-1 orbited the moon for nine months when few had any interest in the moon, but carried an instrument from NASA that provided the first evidence of water molecules on the surface of the moon. Chandrayaan-1 also paved the way for India to undertake planetary missions; in 2014, its Mars Orbiter Mission called Mangalyaan ("Mars-craft") successfully reached Mars for less than Rs 450 Crore (US$73 million). It's still there are still sending back images.

"Having done an orbiter, the next stage is to put a lander on the moon, and preferably a Rover," says Bagla. That's exactly what ISRO plans to do with Chandrayaan-2. "It was an obvious next choice, but it's tricky because it's being done with indigenous resources – and it's the most complex mission ISRO has ever done.

How much does Chandrayaan-2 cost?

ISRO is known for its frugal space missions, and Chandrayaan-2 looks cheap in comparison to global missions, but that misses the point. "At Rs 800 crore (US$115 million) it's a lot of taxpayer's money," says Bagla. "So ISRO is treading carefully."

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India's Mars spacecraft launches from the east coast island of Sriharikota, India, on Nov. 5, 2013. (AP Photo/Arun Sankar K)

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Is Chandrayaan-2 risky?

Yes, but all missions to land on a celestial body come with inherent risks. The most dangerous parts are the separation of the lander from the orbiter, and the lunar landing, which is a freefall for the last few meters. "You have to hit the bullseye in one go once you decide to land," says Bagla."If you're not able to fire your retro rockets and land with the minimum of energy, you have a failure, and there have been many. The risk is very high but they have done a lot of iterations and simulations and they're riding on the confidence that they were able to hit the bullseye at Mars."

After Chandrayaan-2, ISRO has a target of August 15, 2022 (the 75th anniversary of India's independence) to put three Indian astronauts into orbit for the first time. It's also planning missions to send probes to both Venus and Mars

Personally speaking, I think ISRO should involve private companies interested in space exploration to expand their pool of funds for Chandrayaan-2 mission. I am sure that given ISRO's reputation internationally, many companies would express interest in extending their additional cash surplus for this mission. It would not only allow them to build a mission-specific capitalisation base (for civil & commercial missions) but also encourage and expedite potential resource exploitation.

Would love to hear one day that SpaceX and ISRO have joined forces for multiple missions.
 
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Personally speaking, I think ISRO should involve private companies interested in space exploration to expand their pool of funds for Chandrayaan-2 mission. I am sure that given ISRO's reputation internationally, many companies would express interest in extending their additional cash surplus for this mission. It would not only allow them to build a mission-specific capitalisation base (for civil & commercial missions) but also encourage and expedite potential resource exploitation.

Would love to hear one day that SpaceX and ISRO have joined forces for multiple missions.
Money is the problem..
It takes long time for gains to come
 
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Money is the problem..
It takes long time for gains to come

That is exactly why I said that ISRO should invite private corporations interested in space explorations to become project stakeholders.
 
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