Indian Martian exploration program

Bangalorean

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No, the one by Andreas Klein.

@Bangalorean, did you read all the comments? How are you seeing them? I can see only a few of the total 48 comments.
Even I could see only 4-5 comments. I tried looking around the page, but no luck.
 
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Dovah

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^^ The Russia-China one? :heh:

I can already see the brit-urds and other assorted Western morons coming out with their "poor India hungry India" bullshit as soon as news of this launch is made public. The scum will not look at the fact that this is the cheapest flight to Mars ever undertaken and will not applaud the benefit to mankind. They will not see that this takes mankind one step closer to mass space travel, it potentially opens up new possibilities in cheap outsourced missions, and so on.

All they will moan about is "poor India hungry India no space flights for you". I've begun to have an immense loathing for brit-urds ever since I've started reading their comments online. I am just waiting for a Brit-urd to say something like this to me on my face someday. :devious:

EDIT: I am not sure why Brit-urd is a censored word on DFI. IMO, this censor needs to be reversed asap.
Saar, in the past few months I have come to a realization that those aid/poverty/poor comments are made mainly by the uneducated burger-flipper aid dependent crowd in the BBC/ Daily-Mail comment section. The ones educated about the topic refrain from commenting on those sites or generally make good comments. It is the same with we are baest/ india sone ki chidya comments in the Toi-let paper. Also we can not discount Paki and Chini shills either. Although it is infuriating to no end, I think we should ignore those bastards.
 

Sridhar

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Pre-Launch Updates

Nov 04, 2013

Mandatory Checks and Preparations for Propellant filling operations of Second Stage (PS2) are in progress.

Nov 03, 2013

Propellant filling of PS4 stage and RCT completed.

Mixed Oxides of Nitrogen (MON) filling of PS4 completed at 17:00 hrs (IST).

Mixed Oxides of Nitrogen (MON) filling of PS4 under progress.

Mono Methyl Hydrazine (MMH) filling of Reaction Control Thrusters (RCT) completed.

Mono Methyl Hydrazine (MMH) filling completed.

Propellant filling operations of Fourth Stage (PS4) are in progress.

The 56 hr 30 min countdown of Mission commenced at 06:08 hrs (IST).

Nov 02, 2013


All the pre-countdown activities have been completed satisfactorily and the 56 and half hr countdown of Mission will commence tomorrow at 06:08 hrs (IST).

Pre-count down activities of Mission commenced at 08:45 hrs.

Nov 01, 2013

Launch Authorisation Board has approved & cleared the PSLV-C25/Mars Orbiter Mission launch on Nov 05, 2013 at 14:38 hrs (IST)

56 and half hr countdown for launch will begin on Nov 03, 2013 at 06:08 hrs (IST)

Oct 31, 2013

Launch Rehearsal of PSLV-C25/Mars Orbiter Mission has been completed successfully in the afternoon on Oct 31, 2013.

Launch Rehearsal of PSLV-C25/Mars Orbiter Mission commenced at 06:08 hrs (IST) on Oct 31, 2013 at First Launch Pad, SDSC SHAR.

Vehicle systems powered and health is normal.

Oct 30, 2013

Spacecraft & Launch Vehicle integrated level checks completed.

Preparations for Launch Rehearsal are under progress.

Oct 22, 2013

Spacecraft Integration with the Launcher PSLV-C25 Completed.

Heat Shield Closure Activity is completed.
Welcome To Indian Space Research Organisation - Mars Orbiter Mission
 

tramp

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Comments on the lines of no Indian should have a full meal until the last of its famished millions is not fed are best ignored. We know what an achievement it would be to reach the Mars orbit... and let us keep out fingers crossed until the mission is declared a success.

Way to go ISRO!!
 

lupgain

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Re: 'Lucky peanuts' wish from Nasa to Isro on Mars mission

Good luck for indiya's MOM mission
 

AVERAGE INDIAN

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India's Mars probe aims to steal technological star status from China

Multimillion-dollar space rocket launch showcases India's prowess but critics say resources could be better deployed

The Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle that will carry the orbiter awaits launch at the Satish Dhawan Space Centre. Photograph: Arun Sankar K/AP

The cyclone season is almost over, the planets are in alignment, the countdown has started. On Tuesday at 2.46pm local time, a rocket will blast off from the Indian space port on a small island in the Bay of Bengal, heading for Mars.

Its course will be closely followed. The $70m (£45m) mission – India's first attempt to reach the red planet – aims not just to gather information that might indicate if life has ever existed or could exist there, nor simply to showcase Indian technology, but to steal an interplanetary march on its regional rival, China.

"In the last century the space race meant the US against the Soviets. In the 21st century it means India against China," said Pallava Bagla, one of India's best known science commentators. "There is a lot of national pride involved in this."

That the mission was about national pride was never in doubt. It wasannounced last year by prime minister Manmohan Singh in his annual address from the battlements of Delhi's famous Red Fort, the bastion of the Mughal emperors. Its success would mean the Indians would join the Russians, the US and the European space agency which have all also reached Mars.

A plunging currency, ailing economy and the state's seeming inability to deliver basic services have led many Indians to question whether their nation is quite as close to becoming a global superpower as it seemed in the heady years of the last decade when economic growth pushed the 10%. For a government beset by charges of corruption and mismanagement, the Mars mission is one way to repair its battered image. It was announced in the week more than 600 million people were hit by the world's worst power cut.

Such expenditure is, however, controversial, with some questioning whether India, where more than 40% of children are malnourished and half the population have no toilets, can afford the mission. One development economist called it a symptom of "the Indian elite's delusional quest for superpower status".

Critics of Britain's aid programme in the country have also been angered by the mission. The UK gives India around £300m each year.

But Pallava said such criticism befuddled him. "Really the money involved is tiny compared to other expenditures," he said.

Successive Indian governments have invested heavily in the country's space programme, making it one of the most capable in the developing world. The task of the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) team is extraordinarily technical, involving huge numbers of complex calculations of the trajectory and speed of the rocket, the satellite and planets.

Indian scientists say they are optimistic that it will be successful.

"This is a very complicated mission but we have the capability to do it. We have developed new knowledge and we are very confident that we can achieve the navigation from earth to Mars accurately and properly,"said ISRO chairman Dr K Radhakrishnan.

So far success in the race against the Chinese has proved elusive, with Beijing's scientists achieving a manned space mission in 2003 and beating India by placing a satellite in the moon's orbit in 2007. The mission to launch the Mangalyaan, or vehicle to Mars, has not been without its problems. The failure of India's most powerful rocket, the first choice to hoist the heavy satellite into space, has necessitated the full deployment of what is arguably India's greatest talent – improvisation, orjugaad, as it is known locally.

Instead of sending their mission directly to Mars, the ISRO plans to place its satellite in the earth's orbit first, and then use the momentum generated through a series of complex manoeuvres to send the device towards its final destination. If all goes well, it will reach the planet sometime next summer.

The scientists will also have to hit a five-minute window for the launch. If they miss it, they will have to wait another two years – or possibly five – for another chance.
India's Mars probe aims to steal technological star status from China | World news | theguardian.com
 

AVERAGE INDIAN

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India, ISRO gear up for Mars odyssey glory

At sharp 6.08am on Sunday just as the sun was rising over Sriharikota, the final 56-and-a-half-hour countdown for the much-awaited launch of India's Mars Orbiter Mission (MOM) started. The Rs 450-crore Mars mission, which has attracted worldwide interest, is slated for lift-off at 2.38pm on November 5 from the Satish Dhawan Space Centre, Sriharikota in Andhra Pradesh. On November 1, Isro's launch authorization board had given the final green signal for the launch of the MOM.

The nod was based on the flawless launch rehearsal on October 31. With just two days left for the lift- off, all systems on Sunday received a "go" for India's date with the Red Planet. State-run Doordarshan will telecast the launch live from 2pm onwards on November 5.

The mission is in the last stages of readiness, with propellant being filled in the fourth and last phase of the rocket at 1.30pm.

Scientists at the spaceport told TOI that all the preparations are going on as per schedule. "The weather is fine and all parameters are just great for the launch," an Indian Space Research Organisation official said.

India will be the sixth — after the US, Russia, China, Japan and the European Union—to launch a Mars mission. Once launched, thesatellite is expected to take more than 40 minutes to get injected into Earth's orbit.

The orbiter will remain in Earth orbit till December 1 when it starts its 300-day voyage to Mars. It is expected to reach the orbit of the red planet on September 24, 2014, after traversing 400 million km. The two tracking ships of Shipping Corporation of India — SCI Nalanda and SCI Yamuna — have taken their positions in the South Pacific, off Fiji, for monitoring the mission. during the initial phases of the launch and the separation of the spacecraft from the fourth stage of the rocket.

ToI has learnt that scientists at the mission control centres of Nasa's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, the European Space Agency and the Japanese Aerospace Exploration Agency will also monitor the launch. The official Facebook page of the mission, which was launched on October 22, has proved immensely popular and garnered nearly 20,000 hits so far. Isro completed filling of mixed oxides of nitrogen into the fourth stage of the launch vehicle. The final nod for the mission was given by the Launch Authorisation Board on November 1, after Isro completed its successful rehearsal on October 31.

The payload has five indigenous instruments that will look for, among other things, traces of methane and deuterium, signs of possible early life and water in Mars. Of the 51 such missions by the US and Russia/USSR, 21 have been successful.

"Orbiting Mars itself is a challenge," said Isro chairman K Radhakrishnan. "This is our first interplanetary mission. There will be bigger missions later." Fourteen days after the Indian mission, the US will be launching a similar Mars orbiter called Maven.

Nasa will provide earthly support to MOM

Nasa will help Isro with ground monitoring from three deep-space facilities after the launch. The American space agency will send its own probe, Maven, 13 days later. The American agency is under budget pressure and has faced cuts to proposed Mars missions in 2016 and 2018 despite having an overall objective, set by US President Barack Obama, of sending an astronaut there by 2030.

The United States is the only nation that has successfully sent robotic explorers to land on Mars, the most recent being Curiosity, a nearly one-tonne vehicle which touched down in August 2012. One of its discoveries appeared to undercut the purpose of the Indian mission after a study published in September revealed Curiosity detected only trace elements of methane in the Mars atmosphere

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/...r-Mars-odyssey-glory/articleshow/25191968.cms
 

t_co

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Good luck India! Pioneering a cheaper pathway to Mars is something that all spacefaring nations will welcome.
 

Dovah

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Daily Mail is cheating saar, it's like India TV on crack.

-----------

Okay but this one is from The Guardian

Of course, there are hundreds of millions of people in India living in grinding poverty. The fact remains that without overseas aid, these people will die.
The fact that you say "No one wants your aid in India" says far more about India than anyone else... the country and its government is far happier to spend uncountable millions on vanity projects rather than feeding its poor.
Shocking.
Kya aap paanchvi pass se tez hain? :rofl:
 
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Defenceindia2010

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With every article relating to India and British AID money the comments and suggestions by EXPERTS indicates that Britain as a nation is jealous and frustrated at the fact that a nation poorer and technologically less advanced has achieved in space exploration what only few nations excluding Britain can lay claim to, it is a known fact that their AID goes directly to the so called NGO's but the British tend to act STUPID and suggest the money has been diverted to the space program. No one is tries to prove just how the money used in the space program belongs to the AID that is given to British NGO's operating in India thus proving that there is no evidence to their down right IDIOTIC claims of AID used to fund Indian space program and where was their compassion for the poor when the British were looting and exploiting India in the colonial times.
 

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