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Title: India


1
Indias Moon Mission Chandrayaan -1 Aishwarya
Narain formerly with SAC, ISRO Presented at
the Colloquium, Space Studies, University of
North Dakota, January 12, 2009

2
MOON
3
MOON
4
Reference in Ancient Indian verses
5
  • The Apollo and Luna missions returned 382
    kilograms (840 pounds) of rock and soil from
    which three major surface materials have been
    studied the regolith, the maria, and the terrae.
  • Geological activity on the Moon consists of
    occasional large impacts and the continued
    formation of the regolith. It is thus considered
    geologically dead. With such an active early
    history of bombardment and a relatively abrupt
    end of heavy impact activity, the Moon is
    considered fossilized in time.

6
Chandrayaan 1Indias first unmanned mission to
Moon
Payload/ instruments Indigenous 5 AO Payloads 6
7
Chandrayaan 1
8
Spectrum used

9
CHANDRAYAAN-1 ORBIT
  • Altitude 100km
  • Inclination 90
  • Period 117.6 min
  • Mean ground velocity 1.54 km/s

10
Mission objectives
  • To realise the mission goal of harnessing the
    science payloads, lunar craft and the launch
    vehicle with suitable ground support systems
    including Deep Space Network (DSN) station.
  • To realise the integration and testing, launching
    and achieving lunar polar orbit of about 100 km,
    in-orbit operation of experiments, communication/
    telecommand, telemetry data reception, quick look
    data and archival for future mission.

11
Chandrayaan -1
  • Main objective
  • High-resolution remote sensing of the moon in
  • visible, near infrared (NIR), low energy X-rays
    and
  • high-energy X-ray regions
  • Detailed objectives
  • A three dimensional atlas of Moon
  • Chemical and mineralogical mapping(Onboard SSR
    has storage capacity of 50 GB)

12
End goal
  • Photo, geological, mineralogical and chemical
    mapping will enable identification of different
    geological units to infer the early evolutionary
    history of the Moon.
  • Chemical mapping will enable to determine the
    stratigraphy and nature of the Moon's crust and
    thereby test certain aspects of magma ocean
    hypothesis.
  • Determine the compositions of impactors that
    bombarded the Moon during its early evolution
    which is also relevant to our own planet Earth

13
Major Milestones
  • The upgraded version of PSLV (PSLV-XL -(PSLV-C11)
    was used to inject the 1380 kg mass spacecraft
    into a 255 x 22860 km orbit
  • Launched on Oct. 22, 2008 from SDSC SHAR,
    Sriharikota, INDIA
  • Main orbiter placed in 100 km circular polar
    orbit on November 12
  • MIP ( Moon Impact Probe) dropped successfully on
    November 14

14
Launch vehicle
Upgraded version of PSLV viz., PSLV-XL (PSLV-C11)
was used to inject the 1380 kg mass spacecraft
into a 255 x 22860 km orbit. (four stages, using
solid and liquid propulsion systems alternately)
15
Journey to Moonstarted Oct 22
Completed Nov 12
16
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17
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18
Chandrayaan-1 External Network
lt 100,000 km gt 100, 000 km
  • Bearslake
  • APL
  • JPL
  • Lucknow
  • IDSN
  • Hawaii
  • Bangalore
  • Brunei
  • TVM
  • Biak

Portblair
  • Mauritius
  • Cuiaba

Indias Moon Mission, Space Studies Colloquium,
UND
12 January 2009
15
19
Payload/ instruments
  • Five Indigenously developed
  • Six as part of Announcement of Opportunity
    Payloads from the USs National Aeronautics and
    Space Agency, European Space Agency (a consortium
    of 17 European nations) and the Bulgarian Academy
    of Sciences

20
Indigenously developed
1. TMC Terrain Mapping stereo Camera (TMC) in
the panchromatic band Swath 20 km and Spatial
resolution 5 m
6.3kg, 1.8W
21
Indigenously developed (contd)
  • 2. HySI
  • Hyper Spectral Imaging camera
  • (HySI) operating in 400-950 nm
  • (VNIR) with a spectral resolution
  • better than 15 nm and spatial
  • resolution of 80 m and a swath of
  • 20 km. This will be mapping the
  • lunar surface in 64 contiguous
  • bands.
  • HySI will collect the Suns reflected
  • light from the Moons surface
  • through a tele-centric refractive
  • optics and focus on to an APS area
  • detector for this purpose.

2.5kg, 0.8W
22
Image acquired by TMC of Coulomb C crater
23
lt HYSI gt
TMC Enlarged view of Barrow Crater from
Chandrayaan- 1
24
HYSI 64 band data
25
TMC imagery showing part of Torricelli crater
November 13, 2008
26
Polar region of the Moon
Imagery acquired on November 15, 2008 from
Chandrayaan - 1
27
Picture from MIP
Imagery acquired from Moon Impact Probe MIP on
November 14, 2008
28
Picture from MIP
November 14, 2008
29
Indigenously developed (contd)
  • 3. LLRI
  • Lunar Laser Ranging Instrument has a height
    resolution of lt 5 m
  • Output from LLRI will produce a highly accurate
    Lunar topography.
  • Detailed study will lead to stress, strain and
    flexural properties of lithosphere.
  • Combined with gravity will lead to detailed
    inferences on density distribution of the crust

30
Indigenously developed (contd)
  • 4. HEX
  • High Energy X-ray spectrometer (HEX) using
    Cadmium-Zinc-Telluride (CdZnTe) detector in the
    30-270 keV energy region with spatial resolution
    of 33 km
  • First experiment to carry out spectral studies
    of planetary surface at hard X-ray energies using
    good energy resolution detectors. The High Energy
    X-ray (HEX) experiment is designed primarily to
    study the emission of low energy (30-270 keV)
    natural gamma-rays from the lunar surface due to
    238U and 232Th and their decay chain nuclides.

31
Indigenously developed (contd)
  • 5. MIP
  • Moon Impact Probe (MIP) is
  • a piggyback on the main orbiter of the
  • Chandrayaan-1 spacecraft,
  • which will impact on the surface of the moon.
  • Design development of technology for soft
  • landing in future and deployment of a rover
  • (planned for Chandrayaan 2)
  • Exploration of Moon in a close range using
  • instruments like Video imaging system, Mass
  • spectrometer profiling lunar atmosphere
  • during descent, communication system
  • performance between Main orbiter and MIP

Contd gtgtgt
32
MIP Mission Profile
33
AO Payloads (six in all)
  • 1. C1XS
  • Chandrayaan-1 X-ray
  • Spectrometer (C1XS)
  • through ESA - collaboration
  • between Rutherford
  • Appleton Laboratory,UK and
  • ISRO Satellite Centre, ISRO
  • High quality X-ray spectroscopic
  • mapping to answer key questions
  • on the origin and evolution of the
  • Moon

34
AO Payloads (contd)

 

  • 2. SIR-2 (Spectrometer infrared)
  • Near Infra-Red spectrometer
  • (0.93-2.4 microns)
  • Built by Max Plank Institute
  • for Solar System Science,
  • Max-Planck Society,
  • Germany and ESA
  • Analyse the lunar surface
  • in various geological/
  • mineralogical and
  • topographical units http//www.mps.mpg.de/projects
    /sir/


 


35
AO Payloads (contd)
  • 3.SARA
  • Sub keV Atom Reflecting
  • Analyser (SARA) through ESA
  • PayloadSwedish Institute of
  • Space Physics, Sweden
  • and Physics
  • and
  • Space Physics Lab., VSSC
  • (Digital processing unit of this
  • payload designed and
  • Developed)
  • http//www.irf.se/link/sara http//www.space.unibe
    .ch
  • http//www.isas.ac.jp/e/index.shtml

36
SARA (contd)
  • SARA instrument consists of
  • Neutral atom sensor CENA (Chandrayaan-1 Energetic
    Neutrals Analyzer)
  • Solar wind monitor SWIM and
  • DPU (Data Processing Unit)

37
SARA (contd)
  • Imaging the Moon surface using
  • low energy neutral atoms (10 eV - 3.2 keV)
  • permanently shadowed areas and volatile rich
    areas
  • solar wind-surface interaction
  • lunar surface magnetic anomalies
  • Leading to studies of space weathering

38
AO Payloads (contd)
  • 4. RADOM
  • Radiation Dose Monitor
  • Experiment (RADOM)
  • (Bulgarian Academy of
  • Sciences).
  • Characterise (qualitatively and
  • Quantitatively) the radiation
  • environment in near lunar space,
  • in terms of particle flux, dose rate
  • and deposited energy spectrum.

39
AO Payloads (contd)
  • 5. Mini-SAR
  • Miniature Synthetic Aperture Radar
  • (Mini-SAR) from Applied Physics
  • Laboratory, Johns Hopkins University
  • and Naval Air Warfare Centre, USA
  • through NASA
  • Goal
  • Detect water/ ice in shadowed
  • polar regions cold traps (50-70 k)
  • (frequency 2.38 GHz, with a
  • resolution of 75 m per pixel)

http//www.lpi.usra.edu/meetings/lcross2006/pdf/90
13.pdf
40
Mini-SAR and LRO
41
AO Payloads (contd)
  • 6. M3 (M-cube)
  • Moon Mineralogy Mapper
  • (M3) is from Brown University
  • and Jet Propulsion Lab.,
  • USA coordinated through
  • NASA
  • (High res. Imaging spectrometer)
  • Goal
  • Study mineralogy to infer
  • the lunar geologic
  • evolution
  • (high resolution data)

Contd gtgt
42
Moon Mineralogy Mapper
M3 (M-cubeTeam) gt
http//moonmineralogymapper.jpl.nasa.gov/SCIENCE/
http//discovery.nasa.gov/M3.html
43
M3 (contd)
44
Ground Segment
Indian Deep Space Network (IDSN), Mission
Operations Complex (MOX), Payload Operations
Centre (POC), Indian Space Science Data Centre
(ISSDC), ISTRAC Network Control Centre (NCC)
45
Chandrayaan - 1Ground Segment Organisation
46
Future Moon Missions
  • Chandrayaan-2, scheduled for 2012 for a soft
    landing on Moon
  • Chandrayaan-3 planned for 2015 will have a robot
    for chemical analysis of lunar soil and
    investigate presence of water and mineral
    composition using a wealth of information
    acquired from 1 and 2
  • Manned mission ..
  • Mr. Mylswamy Annadurai is the Project Director
    of Chandrayaan- 1

47
  • THANKS
  • http//www.isro.org/
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