You are not logged in.
For SpaceNut .... there were 7 topics containing the word India or Indian, but they were all written with specific focus.
This topic is offered for generic updates on activities of the India space program.
India is doing a wide range of missions, and we have topics about some of them already.
This topic is offered for NewMars members who are looking for a topic that will fit most any news that shows up in the feeds...
ChatGPT (the original pre-2021 version) reported this today:
Hello again ... i understand your database is closed at 2021 - please find the address for the indian space agency, suitable for air mail
Certainly, I'd be happy to help you with that! The address for the Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO) that you can use for air mail is:Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO)
Department of Space (DOS)
Government of India
Antariksh Bhavan, New BEL Road
Bengaluru - 560231
Karnataka
INDIAI hope this helps! Let me know if you have any other questions.
tahanson43206
Thank you ** very ** much!
You're welcome! I'm glad I could assist you. If you have any other questions or need further assistance, feel free to ask!
(th)
Offline
Some news I seen from Hindu India news bloggers was saying the budget was going to be cut by 9% while others said new missions were upcoming
India tests recovery of spacecraft for Gaganyaan astronaut mission (photos)
https://www.space.com/india-tests-recov … ule-photos
Recovery procedures are yet to be finalized, ISRO said.
Roscosmos is studying the possibility of supplying ten RD-191 rocket engines to India in the period from 2024 to 2029, said Valery Sherin, Deputy Director General of Roscosmos.
https://twitter.com/katlinegrey/status/ … 7635237888
'Gaganyaan will use grid fins to keep itself aerodynamically stable as it moves away from the failing rocket in case of a launch abort.'
https://twitter.com/isrospaceflight/sta … 8948539393
Offline
Indian Manned Spacecraft
http://www.astronautix.com/i/indianmann … craft.html
As of 2015 the design utilized a Soyuz-shaped reentry capsule with a mass of 3735 kg, a diameter of 3.100 m and height of 2.678 m. The ablative reentry shield consisted of carbon phenolic tiles, with tan medium density ablative tiles covering the rest of the outer surface. After re-entry, at a velocity of 233 m/s, a pair of 2.3 meter diameter pilot parachutes stabilized the capsule. This was followed by a pair of 6.2 m diameter drogue parachutes, which reduced the velocity to 50 m/s. At 5 km altitude three 31-m diameter main parachutes deployed. The capsule was designed to splash down in the ocean followed by recovery by Indian naval vessels. The reaction control system consisted of six 100-N thrusters burning MMH / MON3 storable propellants. The capsule was designed to initially accomodate two astronauts on long-duration solo missions. The design allowed later modification to carry three on short-duration shuttle missions to an orbiting space station.
In comparison with the Soyuz and Shenzhou capsules, the Indian version is significantly larger and heavier:
Re-entry Vehicle
Total Mass-kg 3,000 3,240 3,735
Length-m 1.90 2.06 2.68
Diameter-m 2.17 2.52 3.10
Volume compared to Soyuz 1.00 1.46 2.88The service module, based on a 2013 ISRO drawing, is powered by two high-expansion-ratio liquid propellant engines. Based on the payload capability of the GSLV-III booster, it would have a mass of around 3000 kg. A launch escape system. using a tower approach like that on Soyuz, Shenzhou, and Apollo, was planned. In-cabin space suits would be based on the Russian Sokol suit.
ISRO successfully launches SSLV's second developmental flight with three satellites from Sriharikota
Offline
For Mars_B4_Moon re #2 and #3
Thank you for adding these substantial contributions to this topic!
For all who may (also be) watching India's progress, at the moment (early 2023) India is the ** only ** Nation with announced intentions of launching a probe to Mars at the next window in 2024.
(th)
Offline
ISRO successfully conducts key test for Chandrayaan-3 mission
https://www.thehindu.com/news/cities/ba … 563098.ece
Offline
Russia partners India to develop a ‘Marsoplane’; aim to explore Mars with Fixed Wing Robotic Craft
https://eurasiantimes.com/russia-partne … o-explore/
Simulated Crew Module (SCM) which is an unpressurized version of the actual Gaganyaan Crew Module with many of the systems in place!
This is the capsule that will be used on the upcoming inflight abort missions to validate the Crew Escape System.
Offline
'Thanks to our colleagues at isro and NSIL_India for a successful launch. If you don’t already, make sure to follow us for more updates throughout the rest of the mission.'
Offline
quote
Krunal Joshi, counsellor for space at the Indian Embassy, says the first crewed Gaganyaan mission is now planned for 2025. Two uncrewed flights first over the next two years.
Offline
The article at the link below reports on a first landing of a prototype space plane ...
https://www.space.com/india-space-plane … st-success
India successfully lands reusable space plane prototype for 1st time (video)
By Sharmila Kuthunur published 7 days ago
India is working to become a member of the space plane club.
India has for the first time autonomously landed its reusable space plane prototype, marking a major milestone in the country's pursuit of low-cost access to space.
On Sunday (April 2), the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO), India’s national space agency, announced that it had completed the second of four experiments designed to get its robotic Reusable Launch Vehicle (RLV) space-ready.
The latest experiment — Reusable Launch Vehicle Autonomous Landing Mission (RLV LEX) — was carried out in a test facility owned by the country’s Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) in Karnataka, a state in southern India. As part of the mission, the 21-foot-long (6.5 meters) space plane was airlifted by a Chinook helicopter, flown by the Indian Air Force, to an altitude of 2.8 miles (4.5 kilometers) and released mid-air at 7:10 am local Indian time (0140 GMT; 9:40 pm EST on April 1).
Then, the space plane, a miniature vehicle that is still being developed, demonstrated its ability to perform a series of approach and landing maneuvers that helped it touch down safely 30 minutes later, at 7:40 am local time in India (0210 GMT; 10:10 pm EST on April 1) on the runway operated by the same test facility.
Related: ISRO: The Indian Space Research Organisation
(th)
Offline
Dr Somanath says the 1st inflight abort test for Gaganyaan is now slated for June
'1st uncrewed orbital mission is now expected in Feb 2024'
Offline
India have released the Gaganyaan Recovery Training Plan at Water Survival Training Facility
https://twitter.com/Chethan_Dash/status … 9520086016
'Recently we got to see a 20t (200 kN) tech demonstrator methalox engine built and tested by ISRO.'
Offline
more news and a PDF link
Lunar Polar Exploration mission (LUPEX), also known as Chandrayaan-4, a robotic lunar mission concept by Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) and Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA)
https://web.archive.org/web/20191014163 … 08_2_1.pdf
in Japanese language, the Lunar mission is 6 months (planned)
I'm not sure if the loss of Japan's ispace Hakuto-R changes the time table of events
Navy, ISRO release training plan for Gaganyaan crew module
https://www.thehindu.com/sci-tech/scien … 896006.ece
Last edited by Mars_B4_Moon (2023-05-27 14:29:18)
Offline
Chandrayaan-3 lunar lander
Offline
Offline
Back in the 2000s some predicted India would be the World's Number 1 Super-Power by Year 2020
Artemis Accords expert explains why India is a "sleeping giant" and will fill the void Russia is leaving as a fading space superpower
https://www.cnbc.com/2023/06/29/investi … -says.html
Chandrayaan-3 spacecraft ready to be encapsulated into rocket, says ISRO
https://www.wionews.com/india-news/chan … sro-608988
a debate from another time
What If -- ? - Politics
https://newmars.com/forums/viewtopic.php?id=2743
Last edited by Mars_B4_Moon (2023-06-29 12:40:30)
Offline
Offline
For Mars_B4_Moon .... Tnanks for Post #16, with news of the next moon landing attempt...
Reporters occasionally become confused, and editors are supposed to find obvious errors....
NewMars members may be able to spot an error in this quote...
Chandrayaan 2, which was planned to demonstrate soft landing and roving, crash landed 2.1 km from the surface of the moon.
© The Indian Express (P) Ltd
First published on: 28-06-2023 at 18:54 IST
(th)
Offline
Errors like that are fairly-often committed by reporters who know little-to-nothing about what they are reporting.
I don't know the details of that landing failure, but I'd hazard the guess it SHOULD have read somethin like "crash landed from 2.1 km above the surface of the moon".
There is spell check and sometimes grammar check (which I find particularly objectionable), but there is NO SUCH THING as content factuality check! He who writes it has to do that, himself. Or herself.
GW
GW Johnson
McGregor, Texas
"There is nothing as expensive as a dead crew, especially one dead from a bad management decision"
Offline
There is another possibility .... In the past, when printing was done with lead slugs, reporters were instructed to write the most important details at the beginning of an article, and less important details at the end. If the paper ran out of room, the editor would cut from the bottom, to fit the article into available space.
That should no longer be necessary, but if it still happens, then an editor might try to save space by cutting words out of the text submitted by the reporter.
In the current age, I expect there ** is ** no editor for online publications. If there had been one in this case, then that person might have caught the factual error.
In the end, it is up to the reader to detect faulty writing.
Since this is the India Space Agency topic, I'll add a note that the launch/mission planners have (apparently) added sensors in an effort to try to prevent the error from repeating at the next try.
(th)
Offline
It used to be part of journalism for the reporter and the editor to "get it right". And to recognize when they needed to consult an expert, because most members of the public cannot.
GW
GW Johnson
McGregor, Texas
"There is nothing as expensive as a dead crew, especially one dead from a bad management decision"
Offline
I probably should have read the article instead of scanning through it quick and posting a link. I still believe some news is worthy even if they are not wrote by science people. India news is interesting but from my experience India Hindu news is notorious for throwing in nonsense such as Mystic Voodoo Religious Astrology stuff into a 'Science' article so don't be shocked to see stuff which doesn't really make sense in an article. Journalism is getting stranger these days, they might also be using Chatbots and AI to help them quickly write articles.
I will take a quote from the article
The site was selected as it has several craters that remain permanently in shadows, increasing the chances of examining water ice.
If this report is true then we have Lots of nations looking at the same small regions thought to contain possible water ice.
On the previous Chandrayaan-2
An archive report on times of Times-of-India website with a picture illustration says it suffered a malfunction glitch and 'deviated from its intended trajectory starting at 2km or maybe '2.1 km (1.3 mi) altitude' reported on other sites
https://web.archive.org/web/20190908042 … 030431.cms
'Isro maintained that data was still being analysed.'
'Extra brake thrust may have sent Vikram out of control in home stretch'
Last edited by Mars_B4_Moon (2023-07-01 15:51:01)
Offline
For Mars_B4_Moon ... re failure of Chandrayaan-2 ...
On the assumption you can't possibly read everything that comes out about a topic, here is a note I made recently, while reading about that flight failure ... I think the information is actually posted here in the forum. The report was to the effect that the flight planners did not anticipate the drop off of elevation readings as the vehicle crossed over the rim of the destination crater, and (I'm working from vague memory here) the improperly programmed software could not handle the unexpected input, and began firing for a landing long before it was appropriate.
The "Extra brake thrust" would have been the landing sequence performed early.
(th)
Offline
'Chandrayaan-3 to attempt lunar orbit capturing on August 5'
Offline
Another confirmation re-tweeting ISRO
India’s Chandrayaan-3 lander/rover will arrive into lunar orbit tomorrow, August 5
https://twitter.com/SpcPlcyOnline/statu … 4173315073
SpacePolicyOnline dot com news
Offline
Indian lunar landing mission enters Moon's orbit
https://www.spacedaily.com/reports/Indi … t_999.html
The world's most populous nation has a comparatively low-budget aerospace programme that is rapidly closing in on the milestones set by global space powers. Only Russia, the United States and China have previously achieved a controlled landing on the lunar surface.
Offline