MARS
ORBITER SPACECRAFT'S ORBIT RAISED
The first orbit-raising manoeuvre of India's Mars
Orbiter Spacecraft was performed at 01:17 hrs Indian Standard Time (IST) early
this morning (November 07, 2013) when the 440 Newton Liquid Engine of the
spacecraft was fired for 416 seconds by commanding it from Spacecraft Control
Centre (SCC) at ISRO Telemetry, Tracking and Command Network (ISTRAC) at
Peenya, Bangalore. With this engine firing, the spacecraft's apogee (farthest
point to Earth) has been raised to 28,825 km, while its perigee (nearest point
to Earth) is at 252 km.
It may be recalled that Mars Orbiter Spacecraft, India's first interplanetary
spacecraft, was launched into an elliptical earth orbit with a perigee of 248.4
km and an apogee of 23,550 km, inclined at an angle of 19.27 deg to the equator
by India's Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle in its twenty fifth flight
(PSLV-C25). The achieved orbit was very close to the intended one. The launch
was conducted from Satish Dhawan Space Centre (SDSC) SHAR, Sriharikota on
November 05, 2013. The launch of Mars Orbiter Spacecraft occurred as scheduled
from the First Launch Pad at 2:38 pm IST after a fifty six and a half hour
count down.
Following its separation from the fourth stage of PSLV-C25 about 44 minutes
after lift-off, the solar panels and the main dish shaped antenna of the Mars
Orbiter spacecraft got successfully deployed. Subsequently, the other intended
operations to accurately stabilise the spacecraft were also performed
successfully.
All systems onboard the spacecraft are functioning
normally. Further orbit raising maneuvers using the 440 Newton Liquid Engine
are planned in the coming few days following which the spacecraft will be put
on Mars Transfer Trajectory on December 01, 2013. This enables Mars orbiter
spacecraft to travel to the vicinity of Mars in September 2014 after a 300 day
journey in deep space. At that time, the 440 Newton Liquid Engine is fired
again to slow down the spacecraft to enable it to be captured by Martian
gravity into an orbit around it.
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