India is set to launch its solar probe days after the Chandrayaan-3 landing

India is set to launch its solar probe days after the Chandrayaan-3 landing

The sun is setting in the Netherlands.

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Days after the success of India’s lunar mission, the country is now looking to the sun.

The Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO) has announced that the Aditya-L1 spacecraft will be launched from the Sriharikota space station on September 2 to study the sun and its impact on space weather.

Aditya, which means sun in Hindi, should be placed in a halo around the 1 Lagrangian point of the Sun-Earth system, where the Sun can be seen unobstructed. ISRO Report He said.

Lagrangian points are where the gravitational forces of two large masses create “areas of greatest attraction and repulsion”. According to NASA. The resulting force is used to stay in place and reduce fuel consumption, comparable to “spacecraft parking”.

A statement by ISRO said the launch would be India’s first space observatory to study the sun and would provide “a huge advantage of continuous viewing of the sun without any eclipse or eclipse”.

This mission will allow us to study the solar wind, which may be possible disturbances on earthCommunication, navigation and other systems malfunction.

The Indian government proposed a budget of $46 million for the mission in 2019, but has not released any updates since then.

India on Wednesday became the fourth country to land on the moon, with a relatively low initial budget of $75 million.

For the first time in India, other countries have succeeded in deploying orbital vehicles to study the sun. Parker to explore solar energy In 2021, it will send samples of particles and magnetic fields to the solar corona and to the European Space Agency. solar orbit I started last year.

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