Saturday, 30 March 2013

Mangalyan the India's mars cracker

The information comes out during the 100th Indian Science Congress, taking place this week in Kolkata.

Spacecraft facts:
Its main engine generates 440 Newtons of thrust.
Launch mass: 1350 kg.
It bears a single solar panel, 1.4 by 1.8 meters, producing 750W at Mars.
For attitude control it has four reaction wheels, eight 22-Newton thrusters.
Those are mostly pretty similar to Chandrayaan-1, except for the size of the solar panel. Chandrayaan-1 had a single 2.15-by-1.8-meter panel that generated 750W at the Moon. My guess is that the diagram below is correct and that the Mars spacecraft has a single solar array consisting of three panels 1.4 by 1.8 meters each, which would, together, manage to produce similar power at Mars that the single, larger panel did at the Moon.
Five instruments have been selected, including:
A color camera
A Thermal Infrared Imaging System
A Lyman-alpha photometer
An Exospheric Neutral Composition Analyzer
A Methane Sensor
The engineering model is complete, and the flight model should be completed in March.
ISRO expects instruments to be delivered in March for integration beginning in April.
Launch to Earth orbit will take place "some time in October."
The spacecraft will depart Earth orbit on November 26 and arrive at Mars on September 22, 2014.

The mission does not yet have a formal name ("Mangalyaan" is not it -- as far as I can tell, that name was made up by newspapers needing a name and following the "Chandrayaan" convention). For lack of a better one, though, I'll not change it in my previous posts until we find out what the formal name is going to be.

Jitendra Nath Goswami, director of ISRO's Physical Research Laboratory, is quoted as saying: "We are trying hard and by mid-October we are expecting to launch the Mars mission." And: "The mission has a very specific science objective as we want to study the atmosphere of Mars. This mission will explore things which have not been done previously by other countries." And: "The previous missions to Mars have shown that there was water on the planet. We would want to know how and why the planet lost water and carbon dioxide."

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