Chandrayaan-3 mission launched on Friday will undergo a crucial 40-day phase as the «onboard thrusters would be fired and taken further away from Earth for an eventful landing on Moon's surface,» Director of Vikram Sarabhai Space Centre S Unnikrishnan Nair said. Speaking to reporters in Thiruvananthapuram on Saturday, Nair said that the launch vehicle has performed extremely well and the initial conditions required for the spacecraft have been provided «very precisely».
On July 14, the Indian Space Research Organisation successfully launched Chandrayaan-3 on board an LVM3-M4 rocket from Satish Dhawan Space Centre. And 17 minutes after lift-off at 2.35 pm, the satellite was precisely injected into the intended orbit.
«Today onwards, the onboard thrusters will be fired and Chandryaan-3 will be taken away from Earth for an eventful landing on Moon's surface on August 23,» Nair said. «The vehicle system has performed extremely well.
And because of that, whatever the initial conditions the spacecraft needed we have provided very precisely,» he added. Since the first leg of the experiment is one hundred percent successful, the spacecraft also is in very good health and would be able to go to the Moon on its own using its propulsion and its onboard logic, he said.
An official at the Satish Dhawan Space Centre in Sriharikota, who did not want to be named, said «Scientists would be engaged in several orbit raising manoeuvres during this phase.» The first set of manoeuvres are expected to take place on Saturday, the official said. Chandrayaan-3 Project Director P Veeramuthuvel said on Friday after the launch that ISRO would be closely monitoring and controlling the spacecraft from ISRO Telemetry, Tracking and Command Network
. Read more on economictimes.indiatimes.com