The launch of the Indian Chandrayaan-2 moon is delayed



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The take-off was scheduled for Monday at 2:51 am local time at the Satish Dhawan Space Center, along the southeast coast of India. The spacecraft was mounted on India's most powerful rocket, a geosynchronous satellite satellite launcher – Mark III. But an unexplained technical problem, according to the Indian space industry, which is the equivalent of NASA in India, has led to a postponement of the launch.

The spaceship is composed of several pieces:

  • an orbiter;

  • a lander named Vikram, named after Vikram A. Sarabhai, father of the Indian space program;

  • and a six-wheeled rover named Pragyan, which means "wisdom" in Sanskrit.

In September, the lander (who will be carrying the rover) will detach from the orbiter and head for a landing site near the south pole of the moon.

The rover carries two instruments to measure the composition of the rocks and the ground of the moon. The undercarriage is equipped with instruments to measure earthquakes, temperatures of a few centimeters in the ground and charged particles of the sun in the extremely tenuous lunar atmosphere.

The lander and the rover are expected operate just a few weeks.

The orbiter carries a series of instruments, including cameras and spectrometers, and is designed to operate for at least a year.

For the Indians, the space program reflects the new technological capabilities of their country. The lander and the Chandrayaan-2 rover will explore a place nearby the lunar south pole, an intriguing region that no one has yet seen close up. Water ice exists at the bottom of shaded craters eternally near the poles.

Chandrayaan-2 will not move into a crater but in a high plain between two craters.

This is the Hindi for "lunar vehicle".

As indicated by No. 2 Chandrayaan-2, India has already sent a spacecraft to the moon. Launched in 2008, the Chandrayaan-1 orbiter operated for 10 months and confirmed the presence of water ice in lunar craters.

India has also launched an orbiter to Mars in 2013 that continues to gravitate around the red planet. In 2017, an Indian rocket deployed 104 satellites, a record for a single launch.

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