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“Chandrayaan-3 is in Good Health,” Scientists Start Firing On-Board Thrusters

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NEW DELHI, July 15: Scientists of the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) in Bengaluru have started firing the on-board thrusters attached to Chandayaan-3 taking the spacecraft further away from Earth on a crucial 41-day phase to make a soft-landing at the south pole of the Moon on August 23.

Speaking to reporters in Thiruvananthapuram on Saturday, the Director of Vikram Sarabhai Space Centre S Unnikrishnan Nair said the launch vehicle has performed “extremely well” and initial conditions required for Chandrayaan-3 have been provided “very precisely.”

The ISRO successfully launched Chandrayaan-3 on board an LVM3-M4 rocket from Satish Dhawan Space Centre on Friday and 17 minutes after lift-off at 2.35 p.m., the satellite was precisely injected into the intended orbit.

“Today onwards, the on-board thrusters will be fired and Chandrayaan-3 will be taken away from Earth for an eventful landing on Moon’s surface on August 23,” Nair said. “The vehicle system has performed extremely well. And because of that, whatever the initial conditions the spacecraft needed, we have provided very precisely,” he added.

Since the first leg of the experiment is one hundred percent successful, the spacecraft also is in “very good health” and would be able to go to the Moon on its own using its propulsion and its on-board logic, he explained.

An official of Satish Dhawan Space Centre in Sriharikota said “Scientists would be engaged in several orbit raising manoeuvres during this phase.” The Chandrayaan-3 Project Director P Veeramuthuvel had after the launch on Friday that ISRO would be closely monitoring and controlling the spacecraft from ISRO Telemetry, Tracking and Command Network (ISTRAC), Bengaluru.

“Many critical events are lined up, starting from Earth-bound manoeuvres, insertion into lunar orbit and separation of lander, a set of deboost manoeuvres, and finally the power descent phase for a soft landing (on the lunar surface),”  Veeramuthuvel had said.

ISRO Chairman S Somanath had echoed the same. “We are going to have very hectic days ahead… On August 1 the translunar injection is going to take place as per the nominal programme. So we will have 4 Earth-bound manoeuvres. After that, lunar injection will take place.”

The propulsion module-lander module separation would happen on August 17 and the final descent is currently planned on August 23 at 5.47 p.m., he said. “As you know, it has to capture Moon’s (orbit). If it does not capture the orbit, the Moon mission is not there. I hope our calculation will be alright,” Somanath added. “Every step is critical. So we wait for the next 42 days of work…” he said.

(Manas Dasgupta)