India to Launch Moon Lander Mission
Text of report by Indian news agency PTI
Bangalore, 5 February: India plans to undertake another mission to moon aided with a proper lander that would soft land on the lunar surface after its scheduled unmanned moon mission, Chandrayaan-1, early next year, India’s space agency chief said.
Chandrayaan-1 would be put into orbit using the Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV). The 525-kg satellite will be placed in 100 km polar orbit around the moon and it will have a life time of two years.
Chairman of Indian Space Research Organization [ISRO], G Madhavan Nair said Chandrayaan-2, to be undertaken by 2010, will have a proper lander which would land on the lunar surface and would explore the surface in detail.
Chandrayaan-1 is for mapping applications and this satellite is equipped with remote sensing cameras.
"Chandrayaan-2 will have a lander which would touch down on the lunar surface and pick up samples," Nair told PTI here.
Meanwhile, he said the government has given the go ahead to Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO) to undertake detailed study and submit a firm project report on the manned mission to space.
"Study project has been cleared," he said. "We are going into every detail regarding technologies involved…whatever precision needed…what type of human resources we need…all these will be sharply focused," he said. "By the end of the year, we will be submitting a firm project report to the government."
About 80 scientists gathered at a meeting convened by ISRO in November last year were unanimous in suggesting that the time was appropriate for India to undertake a manned mission.
The preliminary estimated cost for the manned space mission is 100bn rupees spread over a period of eight years, according to Bangalore-headquartered ISRO.
Nair said ISRO is planning to launch another recoverable satellite next year.
ISRO had last month successfully recovered a spacecraft — Space Capsule Recovery Experiment-1 — after manoeuvring it to re-enter the earth’s atmosphere and descend over Bay of Bengal about 140 km east of Sriharikota.
Later speaking at an international seminar here, Nair also unravelled the space agency’s plans to have reusable launch vehicle.
"It’s in the concept stage and by 2020 we should be able to have such a system," he said.
