Mars Orbiter Mission to be launched on 5 November: ISRO

The Mars Orbiter Mission would be launched on 5 November at 3.28 pm from the Satish Dhawan Space Centre at Sriharikota

PTI
Updated23 Oct 2013, 06:32 PM IST
Primary objectives of the Mars Orbiter Mission are to demonstrate India&#8217;s technological capability to send a satellite to orbit around Mars and conduct meaningful experiments such as looking for signs of life, take pictures of the red planet and study Martian environment. AFP<br />
Primary objectives of the Mars Orbiter Mission are to demonstrate India's technological capability to send a satellite to orbit around Mars and conduct meaningful experiments such as looking for signs of life, take pictures of the red planet and study Martian environment. AFP

Chennai: India’s ambitious space mission to explore planet Mars would be launched on 5 November from the spaceport of Sriharikota, ISRO announced on Tuesday.

The Mars Orbiter Mission (MOM), ‘Mangalyan’, would be launched onboard PSLV C25 on 5 November at 3.28 pm from the first launch pad of Satish Dhawan Space Centre at Sriharikota, some 80 km from Chennai, an ISRO spokesperson said.

A decision on the launch date was to be taken on 19 October but postponed in view of bad weather in the South Pacific Ocean.

The powerful XL version of the Indian Space Research Organisation’s workhorse Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV) would be used for the Rs450 crore mission.

Primary objectives of the mission are to demonstrate India’s technological capability to send a satellite to orbit around Mars and conduct meaningful experiments such as looking for signs of life, take pictures of the red planet and study Martian environment.

Launch campaign has already commenced in Sriharikota from where the 1,350-kg MOM spacecraft is slated to be launched by the Rs110 crore Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle.

The satellite will carry compact science experiment instruments, totalling a mass of 15 kg. There will be five instruments to study Martian surface, atmosphere and mineralogy, ISRO said.

After leaving the earth’s orbit, the spacecraft will cruise in deep space for about ten months using its own propulsion system and will reach Martian transfer trajectory in September 2014.

The spacecraft subsequently is planned to enter into a 372 km by 80,000 km elliptical orbit around Mars.

The main theme of MOM appears to be to seek whether there is methane, considered a precursor chemical for life, on the red planet. Methane sensor, one of the five payloads (scientific instruments) on board the spacecraft, would look to detect the presence of methane.

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