according to the Chinese Xinhua press agency an Indian Mars probe may be launched in 2013 or 2015, after Chandrayaan-2
http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2009-08/31/content_11972334.htm
finally, some info on the proposed Indian Mars mission
http://www.asianscientist.com/topnews/isro-indian-mission-to-mars-red-planet-2013/
2013 is probably too early, 2016 or 2018 may be more realistic.
and Chandrayaan was not that successful, after all...
While no-one was watching (or had their eyes on Curiosity)
the Indian government approved a national mission to Mars:
http://physicsworld.com/cws/article/news/2012/aug/09/india-set-for-mars-mission-in-2013
Vital statistics:
Launch on PSLV-XL in Nov 2013
500kg, 25kg payload to "..study the planet's geology and climate.."
Highly elliptical orbit around Mars
Good stuff.
Tolis.
Hmmm, any way to get an Electra comms package onboard?
P
Some new info regarding the Indian Mars Probe
From the following article
http://articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/2012-08-28/science/33449032_1_mars-orbiter-mission-lunar-mission-methane-mystery
one can infer that one of the science objectives is to look for methane and its sources.
From this
http://www.deccanchronicle.com/channels/sci-tech/space/mars-mission-be-fully-indigenous-isro-217
we learn that no foreign involvement (instruments etc) is foreseen. There is also a reference to the probe as "Mangalyaan"
which makes sense I guess ("Mangala" is one of the words for "Mars" in Sanskrit?).
Tolis.
From that last article, they hint at the possibility of still having a 2013 launch though there may not be one until 2016.
I'm surprised ISRO has already declared it to be an 'indigneous' mission. They could have solicited a foreign surface package for a light-weight lander to maximise science return.
this is interesting http://www.firstpost.com/tech/indias-mars-mission-to-begin-november-2013-459232.html
Indians are cutting (and joining) metal for their orbiter:
http://www.flightglobal.com/news/articles/hal-completes-structure-of-indian-mars-orbiter-376942/
A nice summing up of the current state of india's Mars orbiter project by Emily Lakdawalla:
http://www.planetary.org/blogs/emily-lakdawalla/2012/09271011-mangalyaan-update.html
For what it's worth, I think that, although the mission development timeframe does seem awfully short, there are also
some reasons to be optimistic:
1. There are indications, eg the delivery of the spacecraft structure, that work on the project began long before the formal
announcement of the mission.
2. Such a fast schedule is not unheard of. The Mariner 9 mission, the US's first Mars orbiter,
was launched in May 1971, 2.5 yr after the formal project start in November 1968. One could argue
that, with a Moon orbiter under its belt, India is in a similar stage in its planetary programme.
3. The technical complexity of the mission, although formidable in absolute terms (it is, after all, a mission to Mars) is
actually quite modest as planetary missions go. The goal is to attain a highly elliptical orbit around Mars and conduct
observations of the planet from this orbit. The one critical maneuvre of the mission (assuming that is is dispatched
from Earth without problems) is a well-timed engine burn near closest approach to the planet on the first pass.
There is no probe to land, no major orbit changes, rendezvous with either one of the moons or sample return.
This is no Phobos-Grunt, more like a Mars Express sans Beagle 2.
So, I would say that there is better than a 50-50 chance of it getting to where it wants to go. Of course, in the real world
it is impossible to fly, say, 10,000 identical missions to see what the actual probability of success is (that's why we have
bayesian statistics, by the way ) but I remain cautiously optimistic about this one.
Tolis.
To be fair, the Moon's is a much more challenging thermal environment than Mars'. I think.
Emily has posted an update on this one, the instruments have been selected and they hope to have them ready for March. I'm going to wish the Indians as much luck as they need for this mission. I'll be happy to see them get the probe onto a Earth - Mars trajectory.
http://www.planetary.org/blogs/emily-lakdawalla/2013/01040907-isro-mars-update.html
In regards the launch profile, I can remember reading somewhere that for countries like India & China that initial 22,000 km orbit is easier to reach because their launch vehicles are optimised for putting communications satellites into that orbit.
there was a very short story in Science yesterday (for those having access it's http://www.sciencemag.org/content/339/6115/14.2.summary
just one sentence to retain:
http://www.scribd.com/doc/101457962/Symp-Prl-July12 with short article about electro-optical payload of the Indian Mars mission.
You can find that article quickly by using ctrl+f and simply find "MCC".
Mars Colour Camera is refractor design and it has resolution 25 m/pix (50 microrad) from distance 500 km
It has 2K×2K CCD with RGB Bayer filter for visible light between 0.4 to 0.7 microns.
Frame size is 50×50 km from perigee and 8,000×8,000 km from apogee.
Methane Sensor for Mars (MSM) is Fabry-Perot interferometer with ppb detection limit for methane. It works in narrow SWIR window (1642-1658 nm).
Thermal Infra-Red Imaging Specrometer (TIS) is grating spectrometer with uncooled microbolometer array for TIR between 7 to 14 microns.
The high apocentre makes it - in principle - capable of flying by Deimos.
Neither MEX nor the other orbiters currently operating around Mars
can approach that moon.
A paper on the mission to be presented on the 44th LPSC: http://www.lpi.usra.edu/meetings/lpsc2013/pdf/2760.pdf
Edit: http://trishul-trident.blogspot.com/2013/02/highlights-of-aero-india-2013-expo-part.html:
I notice that this is scheduled to arrive at Mars a month before C/2013 A1 (Siding Spring) which has a current nominal flyby distance of 100,000 km (likely to change significantly as the arc length increases). I wonder whether it would be possible to engineer some sort of flyby following orbit insertion? I imagine this is either impossible or would require the expenditure of much more propellant than ISRO would be prepared to sacrifice.
Way too many factors to consider right now. If anything, MAVEN be the most suited to getting a whiff of the tail, given its instruments being specialized for rarefied gases. Would instrument commissioning even been done for either spacecraft that soon after arrival?
And of course, it's really up to the comet to decide where to pass and how much volatiles to emit...
Updates from Emily: http://www.planetary.org/blogs/emily-lakdawalla/2013/04011229-isros-mars-mission-now.html
The latest on this mission:
http://www.moneycontrol.com/news/technology/isro-gearsfor-ambitious-mars-mission_913146.html
John Sheff
Cambridge, MA
almost everything you wanted to know about MOM http://rd.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1007%2F978-81-322-1521-9_5.pdf
Looks like there's a concern about Siding Spring's tail interfering with methane measurements; their instrument could confuse cometary material with Mars-originating emissions. Given how quickly methane is destroyed by the sun, would it really be much of a problem, even if some ended up in the atmosphere?
Emily Lakdawalla has another post up on this. Key grafs:
Doug, it's been pointed out to me that I made some errors in the paragraph about the GSLV; I've edited my original post slightly. Sorry about that. (GSLV has had successful flights, though not many; recent failure had to do with a cryogenic upper stage).
http://articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/2013-07-24/india/40770603_1_mars-orbiter-mission-chandrayaan-i-mars-colour-camera says that orbit altitude will vary from 385 to 80,000 km, FWIW. That apoapsis is roughly 4 times farther from Mars' center than Deimos' orbit.
MOM Martian orbit parameters:
MOI Epoch: 24-09-2014, 02:34
Periapsis: 365.3 km
Apoapsis: 80000 km
Inclination: 150.0°
AOP: 203.5°
RAAN: 61.4°
Period: 76.72 hr
Sun Elevation: 6.8°
http://www.isro.org/pslv-c25/pdf/pslv-c25-brochure.pdf
It seems that the Thermal Infrared Imaging Spectrometer (TIS) has a spectral range of 7-14 μm and a spectral resolution of 580 nm (THEMIS: 6.8-14.9 μm and ~1 μm, respectively). http://www.iaeme.com/MasterAdmin/UploadFolder/AN%20EFFECTIVE%20MILLI%20KELVIN%20THERMAL%20MANAGEMENT%20STRATEGY%20FOR%20INFRARED%20IMAGING/AN%20EFFECTIVE%20MILLI%20KELVIN%20THERMAL%20MANAGEMENT%20STRATEGY%20FOR%20INFRARED%20IMAGING.pdf
From the Deccan Herald today:
"“We hope to observe Phobos, but not the other one, Diemos, as it is too tiny,” V Adimurthy, senior adviser of interplanetary missions at Isro, told Deccan Herald."
Too bad - Phobos is very well imaged already, Deimos is poorly covered by images especially at high resolution. We really need to see more of it. Even the shape model is very uncertain on the trailing side. China's ill-fated orbiter launched with Phobos-Grunt was going to look at it (I was told personally by a person involved with it). Maybe we will have to wait for the next Chinese orbiter suggested to fly in 2018.
Phil
Is there a link to the webcast? It's t-7 hours, and the facebook page mentions there will be one, but the ISRO site just shows an old link...
The website says the webcast will begin at 14:00 IST, which is to say, not for roughly 5 hours.
I see it now; thanks. Now to wait.
Amazing that a Mars probe can go from first announcement to launch day in only three pages on this of all forums! (not a criticism of anyone, just noting a consequence of the lack of info until the past few weeks)
Yeah. I do have to say that they're making up for lost time with https://www.facebook.com/pages/ISROs-Mars-Orbiter-Mission/1384015488503058?fref=ts. Lots of info and high-resolution photos.
Spaceflightnow has the stream starting.
Definitely a different vibe on the preshow from NASA press conferences
FYI. I'm finding the mobile video stream from spaceflightnow much more reliable than the desktop feed which was very glitchy for me.
2 mins ...
Liftoff!
And coasting...
Hope to see good news tomorrow morning.
So far so good. The liquid fueled fourth stage has ignited. Hopefully everything works...
Successfully made initial parking orbit, looking good thus far.
Looks like India's MOM probe can be tracked here: http://www.n2yo.com/?s=39370
Also this link with more info: http://www.n2yo.com/satellite/?s=39370
As it nears its apogee of 28,746.0 km high, there's some projected retrograde motion for it's relative path on Earth's surface, for slowing way down up there, I'm assuming, and Earth's spin overtaking it's orbital speed.
Being in direct contact with India is probably a boon to operations; remaining in orbit to do checkouts/adjustments prior to the Mars trip has more benefits than just a smaller rocket, in terms of signal delay, familiar environment, etc.
Why doesn't this happened more often? Launch a probe into parking orbit when it's assembled, do checkouts and instrument commissioning at a leisurely pace, and burn with your final stage to interplanetary when the appropriate window opens up.
"The second and third such operations would be made tomorrow and on Saturday to raise the mission apogee to 40,000 km and 71,650 km respectively. The fourth and fifth operations would be performed to raise the apogee of 1,00,000 km and 1,92,000 km on November 11 and 16 respectively. After the successful completion of these operations, the mission is expected to take on the “crucial event” of the trans-Mars injection around 12.42 am on December 1."
http://www.firstpost.com/india/closer-to-mars-isro-successfully-raises-mangalyaan-orbit-1216297.html?utm_source=ref_article
Glad that the ISRO launch of MOM has been successful. I have some info on the s/c gleaned from the Internet.
MOM is based on a modifieed I-1000 satellite bus, first used in the METSAT-1 weather satellite of 2002, which was later renamed Kalpana-1 to honor the late Indian-Amercian astronaut Kalpana Chawla, who died abord space shuttle Columbia.
Rob
Moreover LEO is a poor place to checkout because you have rapid day/night cycles, and any one DSN pass would only be a few 10's of minutes, rather than a more typical 8 hours. And it's quite possible that LEO on an LGA is a poorer downlink than cruise on an HGA.
http://www.planetary.org/blogs/emily-lakdawalla/2013/11102001-a-hiccup-for-mars-orbiter-mission.html
Looks like burn four was not completed as planned. They're going to make up the shortfall tomorrow.
This method seems pretty flexible...
Detail issue explanation in today's ISRO http://www.isro.gov.in/pressrelease/scripts/pressreleasein.aspx?Nov11_2013.
According to info http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-24900271 MOM still has 4 kg fuel reserve today thanks to precise orbit insertion after the launch.
http://www.planetary.org/blogs/emily-lakdawalla/2013/11110806-mars-orbiter-mission-update.html
A schematic of the propulsion system plumbing would be needed to completely make sense of this.
Normally, redundant latch valves are in parallel so that either one or the other can control flow to the engine (and there are normally-open pyro valves in the lines that can shut one leg down if its valve sticks open.) I haven't heard of needing or wanting both open since if they behaved differently they wouldn't be truly redundant (a crude form of throttling?). Perhaps in trying this there was some flow-splitting problem and the flow rates weren't what they wanted. At any rate it seems a bit odd -- hopefully this afternoon's burn will go well.
And it did go well! Apogee now 118, 642 kilometers.
http://isro.org/mars/updates.aspx
Some news on AW&ST blog: http://www.aviationweek.com/Article.aspx?id=/article-xml/awx_11_12_2013_p0-636048.xml
5th burn's ok too: http://isro.org/mars/updates.aspx
16-11-2013
if I got the math right, it will now pass three perigees without any further maneuver (on the 19th, 23rd and 27th) and will then leave Earth orbit bound to mars on the fourth perigee, around 1 UTC on December 1.
also note that instruments, including camera, are expected to be tested in this 3.8-day orbit. expect the first pictures of Earth in a few days!
First pics; looking good...
http://www.planetary.org/blogs/emily-lakdawalla/2013/11200849-first-images-from-mars-orbiter-mission.html
A quite interesting article on some of the scientific instruments, http://articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/2013-10-25/ahmedabad/43393926_1_mars-orbiter-mission-martian-atmosphere-payloads.
Some info passed on by a friend from India.
"On Wednesday 27 November 2013 over 200 scientists involved in India's Mars Orbiter Mission (MOM) were glued to their workstations and the giant screens at the ISRO Telemetry, Tracking and Command Network’s Mission Operations Complex.
They were monitoring the movement of the MOM spacecraft as it completed its penultimate perigee to go around the Earth before it embarks on a 680 million km long interplanetary voyage to the Red Planet.
Four days ahead of the trans-Mars injection, the scientists are confident that the complex operation, which is scheduled for December 1 at 12.49 am, will successfully enable the spacecraft to embark on a 300-day long journey to Mars.
The trans-Mars injection is to be carried out December 1, which involve complex combination of navigation and propulsion technologies, governed by the gravity of Sun and Mars, and assisted by the 440 N liquid engine, the space agency has also has planned to carry out four mid-course corrections. The first one is scheduled on December 11 and three more next in April, August and September 2014.
During this phase, the 32-meters deep space antenna and the 18-meters antenna terminal at the Indian deep space network located at Byalalu village will be providing deep space support and ensure that the spacecraft is put into the designated Martian orbit.
Upon completion of its 300 journey, the spacecraft is expected to be in Mars orbit on September 24 next year.
Looking at the history of Mars missions, no country so far has achieved the success of the mission in first attempt; Russia made 10 attempts, US succeeded only in its sixth and China is yet to enjoy success.
If ISRO manages to successfully put the spacecraft in the Martian orbit, India will be the first country to achieve this in its maiden attempt.
Let us hold our nerves and wish the mission every success."
Technically, Mars Express and Beagle 2 were launched together as a single mission, so the statement that no country has been fully successful in its first Mars mission is accurate. And the US was successful in its second attempt to orbit Mars (Mariner 8 was the first intended Mars orbiter, Mariner 9 was a success).
Yeah -- I'm not sure where they get the line that the "US succeeded only in its sixth," when the first two American probes aimed at Mars were Mariners 3 and 4 -- and Mariner 3 didn't so much fail at Mars as it ended up on the floor of the Atlantic Ocean, having failed to make its parking orbit. The next complete failure of an American Mars probe was Mariner 8, for the same reason as Mariner 3 -- it failed to reach orbit. In between those two failures, Mariners 4, 6 and 7 all completed their missions.
After Mariner 9's success, the next American failure was the Mars Observer, followed by the Mars Climate Orbiter and Mars Polar Lander (all of which were lost at or approaching Mars). All other American Mars missions have been rather highly successful. The actual American won-loss on Mars probes is 15 successes, 5 failures. This counts the Vikings as one mission each (you could make a case for them being 4 missions, two landers and two orbiters, but I just counted them as one each for a total of 2) and it counts MPL as one mission, not splitting out the Deep Space 2 hard landers. Basically, of 20 American launches to Mars, five have failed and 15 succeeded.
-the other Doug
Reports in Indian mass media are no more accurate than ones in American mass media. The problem with MOM is compounded by the fact that it's been ISRO's modus operandi to release information only to the media rather than do press releases on their own website. They've changed that somewhat recently, but there's still a lot of information that comes out about MOM that is filtered through the media first, often with a loss of signal. So yeah, that's wrong. Further discussion of how it's wrong belongs in the http://www.unmannedspaceflight.com/index.php?showtopic=3728 thread.
As Emily said, the media get it wrong (Who knew!?!). The emails my friend is sending are from reports appearing in his local newspaper.
Facebook page here posting updates: https://www.facebook.com/isromom
Mars insertion burn has begun. fingers crossed!
Halfway complete (crossed perigee).
So far, so good...
All well so far, it seems. Fingers crossed indeed!
Burn complete.
The burn has been completed - apparently it was successful but more details should appear soon. Fingers crossed...
From their Twitter:
Via twitter:
@Mangalyaan1: Trans-Mars injection of #Mangalyaan has been completed successfully.
Sounds promising.
Only a few hundred million kilometres to go and then MOI. Simple
Good luck!
They just crossed lunar orbit. All new territory for India from here on...
http://www.hou.usra.edu/meetings/lpsc2014/pdf/2449.pdf
Hi, i'm trying to get some information about the MSM insturment. Does someone know how accurate is? More than the SAM instrument that Curiosity have? Thanks!
Various articles put it at detecting greater than 10 parts per billion concentration, give or take.
The http://www.sac.gov.in/SACSITE/SAC_Courier_Jan_2014.pdf contains a discussion of the MCC, TIS and MSM instruments. Preliminary analysis of MSM data collected above the northern Sahara showed a standard error of less than 100 ppb.
The Indian spacecraft Mangalyaan on way to Mars is aproaching soon, now it is away less than 9 millions kilometers from Mars and it will be injected into Mars atmosphere on September 24. Up to now, everything goes well.
http://www.hindustantimes.com/india-news/mangalyaan-on-track-no-path-correction-in-august/article1-1247284.aspx
MOM had a successful trajectory correction on June 11, and is due to make another this coming Sunday 14 Sept.
The plan is for Mars orbit insertion on September 24, two days after Maven.
http://www.isro.org/mars/updates.aspx
http://www.isro.org/pslv-c25/mission.aspx
Apparently the Mid-course correction (MCC) planned for yesterday (14 Sept) was cancelled as being unnecessary due to accuracy of previous MCC.
ISRO is stating today that time-tagged commands to execute Mars Orbit Insertion (MOI) are uploading and verification is in progress.
MOI is scheduled for Wed Sep 24, early morning IST (India Standard Time).
The MCC (or TCM - Trajectory Correction Manoeuvre) number 4 planned for 14 Sept has been bumped to 22 Sept. It will also serve as a test firing of the main
engine for the Mars orbit insertion 2 days later.
On its current trajectory, Mars arrival altitude is 723 km. TCM 4 will tweak it down to 515 km.
Mars orbit insertion burn start times:
India Standard Time : 24 Sept, 7.30am.
UK summer time : 24 Sept, 3.00 am
GMT / UTC: 24 Sept , 2.00am
USA New York (daylight saving): 23 Sept, 10pm.
Is anyone aware if MOM's MOI will be live streamed anywhere?
Perhaps an Indian TV network streaming events online?
Any thoughts?
https://twitter.com/pradx/status/513769218131517440
Thanks Emily.
We'll be covering it for the public in our visitor centre in Canberra using that feed plus the simulation in Eyes on the Solar System.
Plus of course our antennas will be the providing communications coverage for MOM's MOI.
Busy week
MOM has successfully performed its final course correction, which also served to test-fire the main engine for MOI.
http://www.isro.org/pressrelease/scripts/pressreleasein.aspx?Sep22_2014
MOI burn start time is now advanced by 13 mins from previously given (above) - i.e. 07:17 IST Wed 24 Sept instead of 07:30... and so on for other time zones.
FYI, the NSF guys are doing their usual eeeeexcellent live coverage here:
http://forum.nasaspaceflight.com/index.php?topic=29440.810
Many congratulations to ISRO on Mangalyaan entering Mars orbit. India becomes the fourth nation/region to successfully reach Mars.
MOD NOTE: New early orbital operations thread http://www.unmannedspaceflight.com/index.php?showtopic=7898.
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