BANGALORE(AFP) – India’s first mission to Mars left Earth’s orbit
Sunday, successfully entering the second phase of its journey that could
see New Delhi win Asia’s race to the Red Planet, scientists said.
The
spacecraft, called Mangalyaan, now embarks on a 10-month journey around
the sun before reaching Mars in September next year, the state-run
Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) said.
“The spacecraft is on course to encounter Mars after a 10-month journey around the sun,” ISRO said in a statement.
“Following the completion of the latest manoeuvre, the Earth orbiting phase of the spacecraft has ended,” it said.
But
Mangalyaan, which is travelling at a speed of 32 kilometres (20 miles)
per second, could still face hurdles before India joins an elite club of
countries to have reached Mars.
India has never before attempted
to travel to Mars and more than half of all missions to the planet have
ended in failure, including China’s in 2011 and Japan’s in 2003.
So far, only the United States, European Space Agency and Russia have been able to send their probes to Mars.
NASA
launched its unmanned MAVEN spacecraft toward Mars on November 18 to
study the Red Planet’s atmosphere for clues as to why Earth’s neighbour
lost its warmth and water over time.
India’s Mangalyaan blasted off on November 5 and is using an unusual “slingshot” method for interplanetary journeys.
Lacking
enough rocket to blast directly out of Earth’s atmosphere and
gravitational pull, it was orbiting the Earth until the end of November
while building up enough velocity to break free.
ISRO chairman K.
Radhakrishnan hailed Sunday’s successful operation to slingshot out of
Earth’s orbit as a “major step” forward in India’s low-cost space
programme.
“(It is) a turning point for us, as India will foray
into the vast interplanetary space for the first time with an indigenous
spacecraft to demonstrate our technological capabilities,”
Radhakrishnan told AFP.
The cost of the project, at 4.5 billion
rupees ($73 million), is less than a sixth of the $455 million earmarked
for NASA’s Mars probe.
Two of the three phases of the Indian Mars
mission have now been accomplished, according to ISRO’s spaceport
director M.Y.S. Prasad.
“The third important phase will be the
capturing of Martian orbit in September 2014 for the five scientific
experiments,” Prasad told AFP from the spaceport of Sriharikota in the
southern state of Tamil Nadu.
Mangalyaan is carrying a camera, an
imaging spectrometer, a methane sensor and two other scientific
instruments to search for signs of life on the Red Planet.
The
Mars Orbiter Mission or Mangalyaan was revealed only 15 months ago by
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, shortly after China’s attempt flopped
when it failed to leave Earth’s atmosphere.
The timing and place
of the announcement — in an Independence Day speech — led to speculation
that India was seeking to make a point to its militarily and
economically superior neighbour, despite denials from ISRO.
Monday, December 2, 2013
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