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Saturday, September 23, 2023

Chandrayaan-3 successfully lands on moon, know what happens next



S. Somnath, ISRO chairman knew at 6 pm that the duty had been accomplished. He stood up from his chair to reassure himself that the operation was profitable. But what happens after Chandrayaan-3’s touchdown on the moon?

S. Somanath, the chairman of the Indian Space Research Organisation (Isro), was conscious that his group had accomplished the duty at 6 o’clock. He stood up from his chair on the ISRO Telemetry Tracking and Command Network (ISTRAC) within the Peenya industrial district of Bengaluru and nodded his head as if to reassure himself the operation was profitable whereas grinning on the anxious expressions throughout him.

The Chandrayaan-3 communications centre, the place he and his crew have been monitoring Chandrayaan-3 as its lander fell to the lunar floor, erupted in raucous applause two minutes later. 

A couple of minutes later, Somanath took management of the microphone and uttered 5 phrases that solely amplified the clapping and cheers.

“India in on the moon.”

Now that the Chandrayaan-3 lander module has successfully landed on the moon, you should be questioning what is it going to do next.

The actual process for the ISRO scientists has begun after its touchdown. Now they will be occupied with the rover operations for one lunar day (14 Earth days) and can analyse tonnes of knowledge coming from coming from 5 scientific devices on board. 

The most important process of the mission should be accomplished by each Lander “Vikram” and Rover “Pragyan” after touchdown.

The necessary process of the Chandrayaan-3 mission is to gather knowledge from there. The Lander and rover are each solar-powered. The solely justification for this selection is that someday on the moon is equal to 14 days on Earth. For this cause, they’ve to gather all the information within the mild of day.

What is the duty of Vikram Lander and Pragyan Rover?

Pragyan, the moon’s rover, will transfer all around the lunar floor and collect info all over the place it goes. The lander will transmit this info to the rover, who will then ship it to Earth.

‘Vikram’ will wait some time after touching down on the moon to permit the mud to settle. Then it would unfold out a ramp by opening its guts. ‘Pragyan’, a six-wheeled automobile, will use this ramp to descend to the bottom. After the touchdown has been accomplished after round 4 hours, the rover will exit the lander.

The rover’s velocity may even be managed to stop falls from shocks. Pragyan will descend at a tempo of 1 cm per second and find a location for a subsequent tour with assistance from a navigation digital camera.

Only “Pragyan” will transfer forward after separating from “Vikram.” As the rover strikes ahead, it would go away the imprints of India’s nationwide image, the Ashoka Pillar, and the emblem of ISRO.


Nilesh Desai
Nilesh Desaihttps://www.TheNileshDesai.com
The Hindu Patrika is founded in 2016 by Mr. Nilesh Desai. This website is providing news and information mainly related to Hinduism. We appreciate if you send News, information or suggestion.

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