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      Chandrayaan-3 Marks Big Leap as Lander Successfully Separates from Propulsion Module

      ISRO announce that the Chandrayaan-3 spacecraft’s Lander Module has successfully separate from the Propulsion module that was propelling it all these days in space. The Lander Module comprising the lander (Vikram) and the rover (Pragyan) is now ready to be lowered into an orbit that takes it closer to the Moon’s surface.

      The soft landing on the Lunar south pole is schedule on 23rd August 2023.

      ISRO said in a post on X (formerly Twitter) :

      After separation, the lander is expect to undergo a “deboost“, the process of slowing down to place it in an orbit, where the Perilune, the orbit’s closest point to the Moon, is 30 kilometres and Apolune, farthest point from the Moon, is 100 km, from where the soft landing on the south polar region of the Moon will be attempt, ISRO sources said.

      The Propulsion Module will continue its journey in the current orbit for months/years, the country’s space agency said.

      ISRO said :

      “The SHAPE (Spectro-polarimetry of Habitable Planet Earth) payload onboard it (Propulsion Module) would perform spectroscopic study of the Earth’s atmosphere and measure the variations in polarization from the clouds on Earth – to accumulate signatures of Exoplanets that would qualify for our habitability!”

      Adding that this payload is shaped by its U R Rao Satellite Centre in Bengaluru.

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      Post its launch on 14th July 2023, Chandrayaan-3 enter into the lunar orbit on 5th August 2023, following which orbit reduction maneuvers were carried out on the satellite on 6th, 9th, 14th and 16th August 2023, ahead of separation of both its modules today, in the runup to the landing on 23rd August 2023.

      ISRO Chairman S Somanath had recently said the most critical part of the landing is the process of bringing the velocity of the lander from 30 km height to the final landing, and that the ability to transfer the spacecraft from horizontal to vertical direction is the “trick we have to play” here.

      S Somanath explain :

      “The velocity at the starting of the landing process is almost 1.68 km per second, but this speed is horizontal to the surface of the moon. The Chandrayaan-3 here is tilted almost 90 degrees, it has to become vertical. So, this whole process of turning from horizontal to vertical is a very interesting calculation mathematically. We have done a lot of simulations. It is here where we had the problem last time (Chandrayaan-2),”.

      Earlier, over five moves in the three weeks since the 14th July 2023 launch, ISRO had lift the Chandrayaan-3 spacecraft into orbits farther and farther away from the Earth.

      Then, on 1st August 2023 in a key maneuver, a slingshot move, the spacecraft was sent successfully towards the Moon from Earth’s orbit.

      Following this trans-lunar injection, the Chandrayaan-3 spacecraft escape from orbiting the Earth and began following a path that would take it to the vicinity of the moon.

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      Chandrayaan-3 is a follow-on mission to Chandrayaan-2 to demonstrate end-to-end capability in safe landing and roving on the lunar surface.

      The mission objectives of Chandrayaan-3 are to demonstrate a safe and soft landing on the lunar surface, to demonstrate rover roving on the Moon, and to conduct in-situ scientific experiments.

      The lander has the capability to soft land at a specified lunar site and deploys the rover that will carry out in-situ chemical analysis of the Moon’s surface during the course of its mobility.

      The lander and the rover have scientific payloads to carry out experiments on the lunar surface.

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