What's new

Will Mars mission propel India ahead of China in space race?

Lil Mathew

BANNED
Joined
Aug 19, 2013
Messages
1,151
Reaction score
-5
Country
India
Location
India
New York: The Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO) will boldly launch its Mars craft Mangalyaan on Tuesday afternoon from Shriharikota, the start of a 300-day, 485 million-mile journey to orbit Mars and survey its geology and atmosphere.
India’s technological ability to explore the solar system has certainly caught America’s eye.
“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,” said The Wall Street Journal ahead of the blast-off at 2:38 p.m. on Tuesday.
This is India’s first Mars mission, so be warned no country has been successful on its first try, unless India proves to be the exception. More than half the world’s attempts to reach Mars, 23 out of 40 missions, have come to naught, including missions by Japan in 1999 and China two years ago.
“Sending a spacecraft to Mars would bring India immense prestige, but we are doing this for ourselves. The main thrust of space science in India has always been people-centric, to benefit the common man and society,” said K. Radhakrishnan, chairman of ISRO
The Mars mission is expected to cost about $83 million and will give India a shot at becoming only the fourth country to reach the Red Planet, after the Soviet Union, US and Europe.
“Questions are sometimes asked about whether a poor country like India can afford a space program and whether the funds spent on space exploration, albeit modest, could be better utilized elsewhere,” said Prime Minister Manmohan Singh in a speech last year.
“This misses the point that a nation’s state of development is finally a product of its technological prowess.”
Though its budget is less than one-tenth that of NASA’s, it is important to note that experts say ISRO has grown into one of the world’s top six space programs since its inception.
Geoffrey Pyatt, principal deputy assistant secretary for South Asia said at a meeting of the US-India Civil Space Joint Working Group that India’s first Mars mission is an “exciting opportunity for US-India collaboration.”
India’s mission may have lost some thunder after the successful landing of NASA’s Curiosity rover on Mars in August 2012 but it does show big thinking. The Americans are also hoping data collected by India will complement research expected to be conducted with a probe NASA will launch later this month, the Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution mission, nicknamed MAVEN.
So what, with data from Curiosity and six other rovers that have landed on Mars, can India’s new Mars orbiter add to the mix? Plenty, say US experts who point out that India’s Mars Orbiter mission will be equipped with a methane sensor and look for signs of past life.
“The time is now for many players to be doing many things across a much wider range of target goals than in the simple days of the moon race. It is not just playing a game, or showing off at the Olympics or something. It is actually making contributions to the world,” James Oberg, a space consultant in Houston, Texas earlier told Voice of America.
“We have seen the technology that India has brought to the space program, very significant technology, and the goals of the program appear to me to be very realistic and very important for India as well as the rest of the world,” Oberg added.
India’s space exploration program began in 1962. It pulled off a major coup in the international community with its first lunar mission. Five years ago, India’s Chandrayaan satellite found evidence of water on the moon for the first time. It was hailed as a significant scientific discovery.
India’s space program has managed to get a lot done, despite operating at a budget of $1.34 billion last year (by comparison, NASA’s 2013 budget is $17.7 billion). India’s space program has developed a successful satellite regime focused on improving the life of ordinary Indians.
The 3,400-kg GSAT-10 communication satellite, the heaviest ever built by India, was launched recently aboard an Ariane-5 rocket. The GSAT-10 will boost telecommunications, direct-to-home and radio navigation services by adding 30 much-needed transponders to India’s current capacity. India is currently leasing foreign transponders to meet domestic demand.

India’s self-reliant space program’s objectives include communication and education via satellite, management of natural resources through remote sensing technology, weather forecasting and development of indigenous satellites and satellite launch vehicles.
In August, India launched its first dedicated military satellite for naval intelligence gathering, amid mounting concerns about the Chinese naval presence in the Indian Ocean.

http://www.firstpost.com/india/will...dia-ahead-of-china-in-space-race-1210563.html
 
If successful, yes. If successful, India will the the First country in the world to get Mars mission completed in first try. China's Mars mission failed.

India will be the sixth — after the US, Russia, China, Japan and the European Union—to launch a Mars mission. Once launched, the satellite is expected to take more than 40 minutes to get injected into Earth's orbit.

The orbiter will remain in Earth orbit till December 1 when it starts its 300-day voyage to Mars. It is expected to reach the orbit of the red planet on September 24, 2014, after traversing 400 million km.

Good luck ISRO!
 
I say yes, doesn't matter if you have no manned space flight, no plan for space station or have a test station, and a host of other things. This is the thing that makes or break a space program.

BTW, our Mars mission didn't fail, the Russians failed us. We tried to use Russian to save resources, but as it turns out Russian rockets is like Russian cars, there's a reason you don't see those on the street.
 
There was one more thread similar to this yesterday..... I dono why west is hell bend on making this china vs india...... Every one knows the ground reality.......China is way ahead in Space technology, India is catching up.... not to compete with china but to cater to India's requirement.....
 
What a stupid article? Just cause this mission is successful does not make our space tech better than Chinese. But we are on the right path fortunatey.
 
dream on india.... China is way ahead and it will take another 100 years to catch up even if china freeze all missions for that 100 years ... so keep dreaming....
 
Actually there is no competition. China has different plans and India has different.

China is more into sending astronauts into space, while India is into space exploration.
 
dream on india.... China is way ahead and it will take another 100 years to catch up even if china freeze all missions for that 100 years ... so keep dreaming....


lol yeah n where is "SUPARCO "

anyways jokes apart....i dun think its gonna happen anytime soon as China has beaten India in space in almost every aspect so far. So derz no point comparing our programs with those of china's
 
dream on india.... China is way ahead and it will take another 100 years to catch up even if china freeze all missions for that 100 years ... so keep dreaming....
lol yeah n where is "SUPARCO "

anyways jokes apart....i dun think its gonna happen anytime soon as China has beaten India in space in almost every aspect so far. So derz no point comparing our programs with those of china's
Oh ho. Dont you know SUPARCO is halal. So it can catch up with china. Hindu India can not catch up with china. Remember zaid Hamid ? "We will be on moon within 5 years.".....Zaid Hamid
 
Oh ho. Dont you know SUPARCO is halal. So it can catch up with china. Hindu India can not catch up with china. Remember zaid Hamid ? "We will be on moon within 5 years.".....Zaid Hamid


you indians cant be changed, i didnt said anything about SUPARCO and this thread is not about it anyway.. so what ever SUPARCO is doing and in position is irrelevant to this thread ...
 
you indians cant be changed, i didnt said anything about SUPARCO and this thread is not about it anyway.. so what ever SUPARCO is doing and in position is irrelevant to this thread ...
Oh achha. Ok. I thought you are trolling.
 
I say yes, doesn't matter if you have no manned space flight, no plan for space station or have a test station, and a host of other things. This is the thing that makes or break a space program.

BTW, our Mars mission didn't fail, the Russians failed us. We tried to use Russian to save resources, but as it turns out Russian rockets is like Russian cars, there's a reason you don't see those on the street.

Russian rockets are best in space industry,and Roscosmos rank second in Space Budget and first in sattelites.They are on par with NASA.
Comparing Russian Space industry with their Car industry is totally wrong and absurd.
 
you indians cant be changed, i didnt said anything about SUPARCO and this thread is not about it anyway.. so what ever SUPARCO is doing and in position is irrelevant to this thread ...

You came to this thread , tried to troll and got counter trolled .
 

Latest posts

Pakistan Affairs Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom