Chandrayaan 1
- The Chandrayaan-1 mission was ISRO’s first exploratory mission to the moon.
- It was designed to just orbit around the moon and make observations with the help of the instruments on board.
- The closest that Chandrayaan-1 spacecraft came to the moon was in an orbit 100 km from its surface.
- The Chandrayaan-1 mission made one of its instruments crash-land on the moon’s surface.
- It was the Moon Impact Probe, or MIP, a 35-kg cube-shaped module with the Indian tricolor on all its sides.
- MIP left an Indian imprint on the moon’s surface.
History
- In 1999, the Indian Academy of Sciences initiated an idea of undertaking an Indian scientific mission to Moon.
- Chandrayaan Mission was launched by the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) and was India’s first mission to the moon.
- The spacecraft was launched on 22nd October 2008 by a modified version of the PSLV C-11 from Satish Dhawan Space Centre, Sriharikota, Andhra Pradesh.
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- The vehicle was successfully inserted into lunar orbit on 8 November 2008.
- This initiative was followed by a discussion with the Astronautical Society of India in 2000.
- Based on the recommendations, a National Lunar Mission Task Force was constituted by the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO).
- The index is a key international resource that measures acute.
Objectives of Chandrayaan 1
- To perform high-resolution remote sensing of the moon’s surface.
- To provide a three-dimensional atlas of the Moon (near and far side).
- To conduct chemical and mineralogical studies for mapping of the entire lunar surface.
- To test the impact of a sub-satellite on the lunar surface for its future soft-landing missions.
- The mission successfully detected the presence of titanium and calcium along with the accurate measurements of iron, aluminum and magnesium on the moon.
- The Chandrayaan Mission 1 ended on 28 August 2009 after the communications to the probe were suddenly lost.
- The probe lasted for 312 days.
- The estimated cost of this project cost was Rs.386 Crore or US$60 million.
- The recent images sent by Chandrayaan-1 suggest that the moon may be rusting along the poles.
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Findings of Chandrayaan 1
- It is operated for 312 days as opposed to the intended two years but the mission achieved 95% of its planned objectives.
- Confirmed presence of lunar water
- Evidence of lunar caves formed by an ancient lunar lava flow.
- Past tectonic activity were found on the lunar surface.
- The faults and fractures discovered could be features of past interior tectonic activity coupled with meteorite impacts.
- Data from the Mineralogy Mapper (M3), one of the instruments on Chandrayaan-1, indicates the presence of hematite at the lunar poles.
- Hematite (Fe2O3) is a mineral which is a form of iron oxide, or rust, produced when iron is exposed to oxygen and water.
- The sign of this finding is that even though the surface of the moon is known to have iron-rich rocks.
- It is not known for the presence of water and oxygen, which are the two elements needed to interact with iron to create rust.
- Recently, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) have found evidence of greater quantities of metals such as iron and titanium on the moon’s subsurface.
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Possible Reasons behind Rusting along the Lunar Poles
- As per scientists at NASA, earth’s oxygen could be driving the formation of hematite.
- Earth’s magnetotail (elongated region of the magnetosphere of the earth) ferries oxygen to the moon and also blocks 99% of solar wind during certain periods of the moon’s orbit.
- The solar wind, a stream of charged particles that flows out from the sun, bombards earth and the moon with hydrogen.
- Hydrogen makes it harder for hematite to form.
- Chandrayaan-1 Moon data indicates that the moon's poles are home to water that scientists are trying to decipher.
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Way Forward
- The findings will reshape scientists’ knowledge about the moon’s polar regions.
- It also suggests that the Earth may have played an important role in the evolution of moon's surface.
- However, more data is needed to determine exactly how the water is interacting with rock.
- The Chandrayaan-1 spacecraft from India was a key component in the discovery of water molecules on the Moon.
- India’s first deep space mission was Chandrayaan-1.
- Its collection of sensors included NASA's Moon Mineralogy Mapper (M3), an imaging spectrometer that supported the finding of water trapped in lunar minerals.
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- The first Indian deep space mission, Chandrayaan-1, was launched with the intention of orbiting the Moon and delivering an impactor to its surface.
- The study of the Moon's chemical, mineralogical, and photo geologic mapping was one of the goals.
- The spacecraft also carried scientific instruments from the United States, the United Kingdom, Germany, Sweden, and Bulgaria in addition to the five Indian instruments.
- Chandrayaan-1 was launched into a geostationary transfer orbit with an initial distance of 140 x 14,180 miles (225 x 22,817 kilometers) and an inclination of 17.9 degrees.
- Finally, on November 8, during a burn that started at 11:21 UT and lasted roughly 13.5 minutes, the probe successfully entered lunar orbit.
- The initial lunar orbital parameters were roughly 7,502 x 504 kilometers (4,660 x 310 miles).
- Chandrayaan-1 gradually decreased its orbit between November 8 and November 12 to arrive at its operational polar orbit
- The orbit is located around 62 miles (100 kilometers) above the lunar surface.
- Chandrayaan released its 64-pound (29-kilogram) Moon Impact Probe two days later at 14:36 UTC (MIP).
- After using a small deorbit motor, the probe entered free fall and began transmitting data from its three sensors.
- At 15:01 UT, the probe fell onto the lunar surface close to the Shackleton Crater at the lunar South Pole.
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- Besides, ISRO also claims that while on its way, MIP had sent data that showed evidence for the presence of water on the moon.
- But unfortunately, those findings could not be published because of anomalies in calibration of the data.
- The confirmation for water had come through another onboard instrument, the M3 or Moon Mineralogy Mapper that had been put by NASA.
- Chandrayaan-1 is a more sophisticated mission with various objectives.
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