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ISRO to sling Mars craft into orbit on Sunday

Published: 28 Nov 2013 - 08:11 am | Last Updated: 28 Jan 2022 - 07:16 pm

A security personnel stands guard in front of the 32-metre Dish Antennae at the Indian Space Research Organisation Deep Space Network station, Telemetry Tracking and Command Network Centre, near Byalalu village on the outskirts of Bangalore yesterday.
Bangalore: India’s maiden Mars craft will sling into Sun orbit early on Sunday for a 280-day long voyage to reach the red planet on September 24, 2014.
“The Orbiter entered the final orbit of earth early yesterday for its trans-injection into the Sun orbit on Sunday at 00.49am for a nine-month journey to Mars through the interplanetary space, a senior space agency official said here.
The craft passed its penultimate perigee (closest to equator) at 07.10am yesterday to commence its four-day final orbit around earth to leave for Mars in the wee hours of Sunday.
“A 440 Newton engine will be fired for nearly 23 minutes to sling the craft into the Sun orbit at a speed of 648 metres per second for which 190kg of fuel will be consumed,” Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) Scientific Secretary V Koteshwara Rao told reporters here.
Orbiter has completed its six-orbit raising manoeuvres between November 7 and 16 and crossed an apogee (farthest from equator) of 192,915 km.
“All is going well, Orbiter will be slung into the heliocentric (Sun) orbit towards Mars for a 680-million-long coasting distance,” Rao said at the space agency’s telemetry, tracking and command network (Istrac) in the city.
The 1,337kg Orbiter was launched November 5 from Sriharikota spaceport off the Bay of Bengal, about 80km north east of Chennai, on board a 350-tonne rocket with five scientific instruments to detect Methane in the Martian atmosphere, measure the thermal emission and capture images of the red planet from its orbit at a distance of 500km.
“The slingshot for the trans-injection will be a complex combination of navigation and propulsion technologies, governed by the gravity of Sun and Mars,” Rao said at a briefing on the Rs450-crore mission’s next phase.
The Orbiter’s trajectory will be achieved using the attitude and orbit control thrusters during the correction manoeuvres planned enroute.
As the fourth planet from Sun and behind Earth, Mars is the second smallest celestial body in the solar system. Named after Roman god of war, it is also known as red planet due to the presence of iron oxide in abundance, giving it a reddish appearance.
Though Earth and Mars have equal period of revolution around their axis, the red planet takes 24 hours and 37 minutes to complete a revolution. Earth takes around 365 days to orbit the sun and Mars 687 days.
“The craft will be injected into the outer space in a trajectory by precisely computing 280 days in advance the position it would achieve near Mars on September 14, 2014, which will be 500km above its surface at that time,” Rao said.
The Mars Orbiter Mission (MOM) complex at Istrac is also daily conducting checks of the main bus systems, redundant systems, failure detection, reconfiguration and its scientific instruments, including its powerful colour camera.
The camera, which has been activated, has demonstrated its functioning by taking a clear picture of the Indian sub-continent on November 19 from a distance of 67,975km with a 3.5 metre resolution.
During the helio sun phase, travelling at a speed of 32.5km per second mid-course corrections will be carried, if required, December 11, mid-April, mid-August and September 14.
“The Orbiter will be inserted on September 24 at 07.14am into the Martian orbit at 372km periapsis (nearest to surface) and 80,000 apo-asis (farthest from surface) by firing the engine for nearly 29 minutes in the reverse direction to reduce its speed to 11,009 metres per second by consuming 24 kg fuel,” Rao pointed out.
The mission has also built-in mechanism for contingencies and redundancies have been built into the systems and the onboard autonomy to switch over from primary to stand by system.
IANS