ISRO to sign MoU with NASA on May 9 on payload
Bangalore, Apr 29: Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) will sign a Memorandum of Understanding on May nine here with NASA on the US payload for the Chandrayaan-1, the first Lunar Mission of India to be realised in 2007-08.
NASA Chief Dr Michael Griffin would be visiting ISRO to sign up the MoU under which NASA would be providing two payloads--Minature Synthetic Aperture Radar and Moon Mineralogy Mapper operating in 0.7-3 micrometre band, ISRO sources told UNI here today.
Besides the US, Chandrayaan satellite would have payloads from Bulgaria and European Space Agency (ESA). The 500 kg satellite (lift off weight 1304 kg) would have a host of Indian payloads which would take up chemical mapping of entire lunar surface, besides help prepare a three dimensional atlas of regions of scientific interest.
The Payloads included a Moon Impact probe to prove technology elements for future landing missions, an high energy x-ray spectrometer, a lunar laser ranging instrument with a height resolution of five metres, a terrain mapping camaera with stereo imaging capability and five metre spatial resolution and a hyper spectral imager operating in 0.4-0.95 micrometre band with special resolution of 15 manometre, spatial resolution of 80 metre.
To be launched by the proven Polar Satellite Launch vehicle that had eight consecutive launchs till May last year from the Satish Dhawan Space Centre at Sriharikota, the Satellite would initlally orbit the moon at an height of 200 km to polar and later be guided to a 100 km lunar orbit. It would have a mission life of two years.
The Rs 386 crore maiden planetary exploration project of India was approved by the Government in September 2003. The project besides the satellite also envisaged setting up of a Deep Space Network to be located near Bangalore with a 32 m diameter x/s band antenna. An Indian Space Science Data Centre to process the scientific data transmitted by the Satellite would also be established.
UNI


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