Results 1 to 10 of 174

Thread: Science For You

Hybrid View

Previous Post Previous Post   Next Post Next Post
  1. #1
    Join Date
    Sep 2006
    Location
    Kerala, India
    Posts
    17,476

    Default

    Chardrayaan-1 is the first Indian Mission to the Moon devoted to high-resolution remote sensing of the lunar surface features in visible, near infrared, X-ray and low energy gamma ray regions. This will be accomplished using several payloads already selected for the mission.

    On 22 Oct 2008, India become a member of the Moon club of USA, Russia, Japan, China and European Space Agency. The Moon mission costs Rs Rs 400 Crores.

    Satish Dhawan Space Centre (SDSC) at Sriharikota

    It was originally called Sriharikota Range (SHAR) and renamed to its present name in 2002 after the death of ISRO's former chairman Satish Dhawan. The centre become operational with the launching of three Rohini rockets in October 1971. The SHAR facility now consists of two launch pads, with the second built recently. The second launch pad was used for launches beginning in 2005 and is a universal launch pad, accommodating all of the launch vehicles used by ISRO. The two launch pads will allow multiple launches in a single year, which was not possible earlier.

    The 44.4 m high 316 ton (Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle) PSLV C11 four stage Solid-liquid propellent rocket was fired from Satish Dhawan Space Centre (SDSC) at Sriharikota in Andhra Pradesh on 22 Oct 2008 at 0622 h IST(80 km north of Chennai). The rocket achieved a speed of more than 7.2 km/s (Orbital Velocity) with the help of powerful strapon motors. The strapon motors used 12 ton of solid propellent and within 18 minutes all the four stages were used up and detatched.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Sep 2006
    Location
    Kerala, India
    Posts
    17,476

    Default Moon mission

    Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV)

    The Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) built its Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV) in the early 90s. The 45 m tall PSLV with a lift-off mass of 295 tonne, had its maiden success on October 15, 1994 when it launched India's IRS-P2 remote sensing satellite into a Polar Sun Synchronous Orbit (SSO) of 820 km.

    Between 1996 and 2005, it has launched six more Indian Remote Sensing satellites as well as HAMSAT, a micro satellite built by ISRO for amateur radio communications into polar SSOs, one Indian meteorological satellite into Geosynchronous Transfer Orbit (GTO).

    PSLV has also launched four satellites from abroad (TUBSAT and DLR-Bird from Germany, Proba from Belgium and KITSAT from Republic of Korea) as piggyback payloads into polar SSOs. PSLV has emerged as ISRO's workhorse launch vehicle and proved its reliability and versatility by scoring eight consecutive successes between 1994-2005 periods in launching multiple payloads to both SSO as well as GTO.

    On January 10, 2007, the PSLV-C7 carried four satellites - the 680 kg Indian remote sensing satellite CARTOSAT-2, the 550 kg Space Capsule Recovery Equipment (SRE-1), Indonesia's LAPAN-TUBSAT (60 kg) and Argentina's 6 kg nanosatellite called NANO PEHUENSAT-1 into orbit.

    Considering the maturity of Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV) demonstrated through PSLV-C4/KALPANA-1 mission, PSLV is chosen for the first lunar mission. The upgraded version of PSLV viz., PSLV-XL which has a liftoff weight of 316 tonnes, will be used to inject 1304 kg mass spacecraft at 240 x 24,000 km orbit and the corresponding spacecraft mass is 590 kg when the target lunar orbit of 100 km is achieved.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Sep 2006
    Location
    Kerala, India
    Posts
    17,476

    Default Orbits of moon probe

    Orbit 1 : The Moon probe (11 instruments weighing 1380 kg) was placed in an oblate orbit of earth after covering 400,000 km. In the orbit, the Moon probe will come 255 km closer to earth and the farthest distance will be 22,860 km.

    Orbit 2 : By firing small rockets, the orbit will be changed. The Moon probe's farthest distance from earth will be increased to 22,860 km.

    Orbit 3 : By firing 440 Newton liquid engine rockets for 18 minutes, the orbit is changed (24 Oct 08). The Moon probe's farthest distance from earth (apogie) will be increased to 37,900 km. The period of rotation of the Moon probe in orbit is 11 hours.

    Orbit 4 : The Moon probe's farthest distance from earth will be increased to 73,000 km.

    Orbit 5 : The Moon probe's farthest distance from earth will be increased to 387,000 km.

    Orbit 6 : By firing small rockets, the orbit will be changed. Now the Moon probe will revolve around Moon. In the first Moon's orbit with an apogie of 5000 km.

    Orbit 6 : In the second Moon's orbit with an apogie (farthest distance) of 5000 km and a perigee of 100 km (closest distance).

    Orbit 7 : Finally the Moon probe will move in an oblate orbit having an apogie of 100 km. This orbit will be achieved on 8 Nov.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Sep 2006
    Location
    Kerala, India
    Posts
    17,476

    Default India's Moon mission

    Spacecraft specifications

    * Cuboid in shape of approximately 1.5 m side.
    * Weighing 1304 kg at launch and 590 kg at lunar orbit.
    * Accommodates eleven science payloads.
    * 3-axis stabilized spacecraft using two star sensors, gyros and four reaction wheels.
    * The power generation would be through a canted single-sided solar array to provide required power during all phases of the mission. This deployable solar array consisting of a single panel generates 700 W of peak power. Solar array along with yoke would be stowed on the south deck of the spacecraft in the launch phase. During eclipse spacecraft will be powered by Lithium ion (Li-Ion) batteries.
    * After deployment the solar panel plane is canted by 30 degree to the spacecraft pitch axis.
    * The spacecraft employs a X-band, 0.7 m diameter parabolic antenna for payload data transmission. The antenna employs a dual gimbal mechanism to track the earth station when the spacecraft is in lunar orbit.
    * The spacecraft uses a bipropellant integrated propulsion system to reach lunar orbit as well as orbit and attitude maintenance while orbiting the moon.
    * The propulsion system carries required propellant for a mission life of 2 years, with adequate margin.
    * The Telemetry, Tracking & Command (TTC) communication is in S-band frequency.
    * The scientific payload data transmission is in X-band frequency.
    * The spacecraft has three Solid State Recorders (SSRs) on board to record data from various payloads. SSR-1 will store science payload data and has capability of storing 32 Gb data. SSR-2 will store science payload data along with spacecraft attitude information (gyro and star sensor), satellite house keeping and other auxiliary data. The storing capacity of SSR-2 is 8 Gb. M3 (Moon Mineralogy Mapper) payload has an independent SSR with 10 Gb capacity.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Sep 2006
    Location
    Kerala, India
    Posts
    17,476

    Default Chandrayan-1

    National tricolour will be dropped in Moon via Moon Impact grobe on 14 November. The mission is to detect the presence of He-3 and water at Moon's surface. The instruments dropped will transmit the data collected to the Moon's satellite and then the earth. Chandrayan-1 has a life of 2 years.

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Sep 2006
    Location
    Kerala, India
    Posts
    17,476

    Default Chandrayan-2

    Chandrayan-2 will be having a Moon Lander and a Rover planned to launch in 2011-12. The rover would move on wheels on the lunar surface, pick up samples of soil or rocks, do a chemical analysis and send the data to the spacecraft orbiting above. Russia's Federal Space Agency (Roskosmos) is joining with ISRO for development of Chandrayaan-2 Lander/Rover. The rover will weigh between 30 kg and 100 kg, depending on whether it is to do a semi-hard landing or soft landing. The rover will have an operating life-span of a month. It will run predominantly on solar power. The Moon mission will costs Rs 12,000 Crore.

    In the final stage of the mission, India is planning to land humans on Moon.

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Sep 2006
    Location
    Kerala, India
    Posts
    17,476

    Default Science Questions

    Name the causal organism of Tuberculosis ?
    Mycobacterium tuberculosis
    What is the common name for 'septicaemia' ?
    Blood poisoning
    Who discovered the vaccine for small pox ?
    Edward Jenner
    What is the common name for Carcinoma ?
    Cancer
    Who invented the 'stethoscope' ?
    Dr. Rene Laennec
    Who discovered pencillin ?
    Alexander Flemming
    What is the normal body temperature in human beings ?
    98.4 F
    What is Otology ?
    Study of ear diseases
    Who discovered the bacterium which causes 'anthrax' ?
    Robert Koch
    Expand the word BCG ?
    Bacillus Calmette Guerin

Tags for this Thread

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •