The profitable moon shot on Wednesday has come like a booster shot for the officers of Indian Area Analysis Organisation (ISRO), which is now gearing up for a mission to the Solar. India on Wednesday night efficiently landed its moon lander close to the South Pole of the moon.
The Aditya-L1 spacecraft — the primary space-based Indian observatory to check the Solar — is at India’s rocket port in Sriharikota and is preparing for the launch.
ISRO can be sending up its Aditya-L1, a coronagraphy satellite tv for pc, on a PSLV rocket to check the photo voltaic environment in direction of the tip of August or early September.
Based on the ISRO, the spacecraft can be positioned right into a halo orbit across the first Lagrange level, L1, of the Solar-Earth system.
The satellite tv for pc across the L1 level has the main benefit of constantly viewing the Solar with out occultation/eclipses.
The Aditya-L1 satellite tv for pc — named after the Solar God — can be carried by Indian rocket Polar Satellite tv for pc Launch Car (PSLV).
ISRO has additionally slated a flight to Venus — Venus Mission — in 2024. Whether or not it’ll be a ‘Evening Flight to Venus’ can be identified later.
— IANS