• India
  • May 15

'Chandrayaan-2 will have 13 payloads'

India’s second moon mission, which is planned for a July launch, will have 13 payloads and one passive experiment from American space agency NASA, the Indian Space Research Organisation said on May 15.

“Thirteen Indian payloads (eight on orbiter, three on lander and two on rover) and one passive experiment from NASA,” ISRO said in a mission update, but did not specify them or their objective.

The spacecraft with a mass of 3.8 tonnes has three modules - orbiter, lander (Vikram) and rover (Pragyan).

All the modules are getting ready for Chandrayaan-2 launch during the window of July 9 to 16, with an expected moon landing on September 6, the space agency had said earlier this month.

The orbiter will orbit 100 km from the lunar surface, while lander (Vikram) will do a soft landing near the south pole of the moon, and the rover (Pragyan) will conduct in-situ experiments.

The orbiter and lander modules will be interfaced mechanically and stacked together as an integrated module and accommodated inside the GSLV MK-III launch vehicle, ISRO has said, adding the rover is housed inside the lander.

After launch into Earth-bound orbit by GSLV MK-III, the integrated module will reach the moon orbit using orbiter propulsion module, and subsequently, the lander will separate from the orbiter and soft land at the predetermined site close to lunar south pole.

Further, the rover will roll out for carrying out scientific experiments on the lunar surface, ISRO has said, noting that instruments are also mounted on the lander and orbiter for carrying out scientific experiments.

ISRO chairman K. Sivan had said in January, “We are going to land at a place where nobody else has gone - the moon’s south pole... it is unexplored region.”

Chandrayaan-2 mission is an advanced version of the Chandrayaan-1 mission launched in 2008.

Chandrayaan-1 had 11 payloads - five from India, three from Europe, two from the US and one from Bulgaria, and the mission had the credit for discovery of water on the lunar surface.

The 1.4 tonne spacecraft was launched using PSLV and the orbiter had orbited 100 km from the lunar surface.

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