Chandrayaan-3 soft landing as scheduled, no postponement : ISRO Chief
Chennai: The soft landing of India's third Lunar mission Chandrayaan-3 on the South Polar region of the moon will take place as scheduled since there there is no postponement or any alternative plans, according to ISRO Chairman Dr.S.Somanath.
Ahead of the soft landing at 6:04 pm on Wednesday evening, he said ISRO was very much focussed on landing its Lander Module (LM).
"We are not looking at any postponement or Plan B", he said.
“The landing is confirmed on Wednesday evening as originally planned,” he said.
Dr Somanath was reacting to reports that the landing will be postponed to August 27, if there are problems in the lander systems.
On Tuesday, ISRO said Chandrayaan-3 mission is on schedule and sailing smooth for a soft landing on the South Polar Region of the Moon.
The systems are undergoing regular checks and the Mission Operations Complex (MOX) was buzzing with energy and excitement.
ISRO in a tweet said "Chandrayaan-3 : the mission is on schedule."
"Systems are undergoing regular checks. Smooth sailing is continuing", it said.
"The MOX is buzzed with energy & excitement!", it said.
ISRO sources said, "The powered descent of the lander for a soft landing on the Moon's surface will take place from a height of about 25 km with a speed of 1.6 km per second."
The focus of the ISRO scientists will be on reducing that speed since the Moon's gravitational force will also play its part.
In what has been termed as "15 minutes of terror", the powered descent for soft landing will begin at 1745-1750 hrs and the LM will land at 6.04 pm., two hours after the commands were uploaded and the telemetry signals were analysed.
The soft landing is a tricky and challenging task as it involves a series of complex manoeuvres that included rough and fine braking.
Prior to landing, imaging of the landing site will be done for locating safe and hazard-free zones.
The lander will be hurtling towards the moon in a horizontal position and the Scientists in the MOX at ISRO Telemetry, Tracking and Command Network (ISTRAC), Bengaluru will deploy the commands.
The rough braking will be for about 11 minutes and the remaining will be fine braking.
The lander’s position will be changed to vertical and in that position, it will hover over the moon, take pictures and survey the landing zone and decide on the safe landing spot.
Top Headlines
-
News
Indian New Wave Cinema Architect Shyam Benegal dies at age 90
December 23, 2024
-
News
French court convicts eight people for their role in teacher's beheading in Paris suburb
December 21, 2024
-
News
Syrian President Bashar Al-Assad flees Damascus as rebels announce to storm capital, say 'end of the era of tyranny'
December 08, 2024
-
News
Man tries to shoot Shiromani Akali Dal leader Sukhbir Singh Badal at entrance of Golden Temple, arrested
December 04, 2024
-
News
Rahul Gandhi, Priyanka Gandhi Vadra's visit to violence-hit Sambhal thwarted
December 04, 2024
-
News
Devendra Fadnavis picked as BJP legislative party head, set to be Maharashtra CM
December 04, 2024
-
News
Rahul Gandhi, Priyanka Gandhi Vadra to visit violence-hit Sambhal today
December 04, 2024
-
News
Will FII investment flow Favour US or China?
November 28, 2024
-
News
No bribery charges against Gautam Adani and his nephew in US indictment, claims Adani Green
November 27, 2024
-
News
Israel-Hezbollah ceasefire comes into effect, halts 13-month conflict
November 27, 2024