23 October,2009 09:27 AM IST | | Nolan Pinto
Scientists sped up things to get as much info out of Chandrayaan as possible before it conked out, says space agency official
All contact was lost with Chandrayaan I more than a year before it was supposed to happen, yet India's first lunar probe managed to deliver on 97 per cent of its moon mapping objectives all because, it has now come to light, space scientists discovered early on that there was a problem with the craft and decided to speed things up.
T K Alex, director, Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) Satellite Centres, said at the launch of a book on India's moon mission yesterday that they had realised soon after Chandrayaan I's launch that there were snags.
"Right at the beginning we realised we had a problem and had an idea this mission would not last too long," he said. "We decided to speed up work by taking pictures of the important areas of the moon as quickly as possible."
Chandrayaan raced against time to win
Launched on October 22 last year, Chandrayaan I was supposed to stay in touch with earth for two years, but conked out in August.
At the time, ISRO scientists said the lunar probe had still achieved almost all of its objectives, which made many ask why the mission was planned as a two-year affair if most of the tasks were to be completed in a year anyway.
With Alex's disclosure, that question has now been answered.
Also, when Chandrayaanu00a0 I stopped sending signals to ISRO on August 29, it was initially believed that only 95 per cent of the objectives had been achieved, but Alex explained that upon compounding the results it was found that the lunar probe had met 97 per cent of its primary objectives.
How we did it: T K Alex, director, Satellite Centres, Indian Space Research Organisation, at the book launch function where he revealed an important nugget of the Chandrayaan I story.u00a0 Pics/NolanPinto |
Booking our place on moon: Author Srinivas Laxman (above) at the launch yesterday of his book 'Moonshot India', which traces the journey of India's first lunar mission, Chandrayaan I. Mylswamy Annadurai (below), project director-Chandrayaan I, at the function. |
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