Chandrayaan-2 Closer to Moon With 4th Orbit Maneuver; September 7 Landing on Track

Aug. 31, 2019



The Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO) on Friday evening claimed to have successfully completed the fourth lunar-bound orbit change for the Chandrayaan-2 spacecraft. In a statement postedon its official website, the agency said that the spacecraft began its maneuver at 6.18PM, using its on-board propulsion system for 1,155 seconds.

Chandrayaan 2, India’s high-profile lunar mission,lifted off on July 22aboard the Geosynchronous Satellite Launch Vehicle Mark III (GSLV Mk III) from Sriharikota, Andhra Pradesh, a week after a technical glitchresulted in the postponementof the launch. The mission comes 11 years after the Indian Space Research Organization’s (ISRO’s) first successful lunar mission, the Chandrayaan 1, which orbited the moon more than 3,400 times and was operational for 312 days until August 29, 2009.

The spacecraftshared its first pictures of Earth from spaceon August 4 beforeentering the Lunar Orbiton August 20. Following the Chandrayaan-2’s entry into the moon’s orbit, ISRO released a fresh set of photographs of the surface of the moon and its craters taken by the Terrain Mapping Camera-2 on the moon-bound spacecraft. The pictures were taken on August 23 at an altitude of about 4,375 kms showing impact craters like Jackson, Mitra, Mach and Korolev.

With inputs from IANS

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