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INDIA’S LUNAR PROGRAMMES PRESENT & FUTURE Chandrayaan-1 and Beyond Deviprasad Karnik (Indian Space Research Organization) COUNSELLOR (SPACE) EMBASSY OF INDIA WASHINGTON DC 2 ND GLOBAL SPACE DEVELOPMENTAL SUMMIT 12 TH NOVEMBER 2009
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INDIA'S LUNAR PROGRAMMES Chandrayaan-1 and Beyond

Feb 11, 2022

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Page 1: INDIA'S LUNAR PROGRAMMES Chandrayaan-1 and Beyond

INDIA’S LUNAR PROGRAMMESPRESENT & FUTURE

Chandrayaan-1 and Beyond

Deviprasad Karnik(Indian Space Research Organization)

COUNSELLOR (SPACE) EMBASSY OF INDIA WASHINGTON DC

2ND GLOBAL SPACE DEVELOPMENTAL SUMMIT12TH NOVEMBER 2009

Page 2: INDIA'S LUNAR PROGRAMMES Chandrayaan-1 and Beyond

Chandrayaan-1:Mission Objective• Design, develop and launch a spacecraft in a lunar polar orbit.

• Develop expertise for planning and execution of mission and ground systems for future planetary exploration missions.

• Chemical and mineralogical mapping of lunar surface to understand the origin and evolution of the moon.

• Systematic topographic mapping of the whole surface of the moon.

• To establish capability of planetary data analysis and also data archival and dissemination.

• To enhance India’s image in the international scene by being part of a select group having capability for Planetary Missions.

Page 3: INDIA'S LUNAR PROGRAMMES Chandrayaan-1 and Beyond

Chandrayaan-1, Payloads

SARA

Page 4: INDIA'S LUNAR PROGRAMMES Chandrayaan-1 and Beyond

Prime Objectives Payload

•· Search for water-ice MiniSAR, HEX, SARA

•· Chemical Mapping C1XS, HEX

•· Mineralogical Mapping HySI, SIR-2, M3

•· Topography Mapping LLRI,TMC

•· Radiation Environment RADOM, HEX, C1XS

•· Magnetic Field Mapping SARA

•· Volatile Transport HEX

•· Lunar Atmospheric constituent MIP

Summary of Chandrayaan-1Wavelength range coverage

Page 5: INDIA'S LUNAR PROGRAMMES Chandrayaan-1 and Beyond

Chandrayaan-1 : International Participation

Page 6: INDIA'S LUNAR PROGRAMMES Chandrayaan-1 and Beyond

Chandrayaan-1 Mission Sequence

22 October 2008 at 06:22 hrs IST

4 November at 04:56 hrs IST

8 November at 16:51 hrs IST

100 km circular polar orbit on November 12.14 November at 20:06 hrs IST,MIP was ejected

Page 7: INDIA'S LUNAR PROGRAMMES Chandrayaan-1 and Beyond

Probe & Orbiter

Orientation Maneuver Separation, Spin Up & De-orbit

Imaging,altimeter,MS data during descent

Impact Probe Mission Profile100 km X 100 km

490

5

Back

Page 8: INDIA'S LUNAR PROGRAMMES Chandrayaan-1 and Beyond

Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle

Lift Off Mass: 319 tonsPayload Lift off capability

SSPO : 1750kgsGTO : 1140kgsEPO : 1320kgs

(260km X 22860km)

PSLV has four stages, using solid and liquid propulsion systems alternately. Six strap-on motors augment the first stage thrust. PSLV-XL is the upgraded version of PSLV. In PSLV-XL, the six strap-on motors carry 4 tonne more propellant compared to PSLV; There is also an increase in the length of each strap-on.

Page 9: INDIA'S LUNAR PROGRAMMES Chandrayaan-1 and Beyond

Challenges in Interfacing Science Instruments• Technical , Managerial and logistic :

• Trade off Studies, Alternatives, Schedule management

• Geographic Locations of Instrument teams: Time Difference

• Work culture: NASA, ESA, JAXA,BSA and Scientists

• Varying I/F requirements– Engineering units – Drawing Conventions and Formats– Mechanical : Mass , Volume , FOV , Access and Thermal– Electrical : TM,TC ,Power and data

• Varying Standards : RS232/ RS-422/CAN-Bus /1553/ Customised Interface– Data rate and volume– Handling Constraints– Cleanliness requirements– Safety issues

• Transportation • Post launch Data processing and Deriving science

Page 10: INDIA'S LUNAR PROGRAMMES Chandrayaan-1 and Beyond

A 0f O Enabled Co-operations• PDS training for Chandrayaan-1 science and data processing

team by ESA team

• SMART-1 tracking and orbit determination comparison exercise between ESOC and ISRO

• SPICE training for Chandrayaan-1 Mission and Science teams by JPL/NASA team

• APL 18m and NASA DSN support agreement

• NAV support discussions with NASA and ESA teams

• Thermal and calibration Support for CIXS hardware

• Calibration and Thermal support for SIR-2 and RADOM

• MLI support for SARA and RADOM

Page 11: INDIA'S LUNAR PROGRAMMES Chandrayaan-1 and Beyond
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Page 16: INDIA'S LUNAR PROGRAMMES Chandrayaan-1 and Beyond

Chandrayan-1, RADOM 22 October 2008Perigee= 255 km; Apogee=22800 km

18:25 18:55 19:25 19:55 20:25 20:551E-1

1E+0

1E+1

1E+2

1E+3

1E+4

1E+5

1E+6

Dos

e (u

Gy/

h); F

lux

(cm

^-2s

^-1)

D/F

(nG

y.cm

^-2.

p.^-

1)

UTC

Dose/Flux

Dose

Flux

020406080100120140160180200220240

Cha

nnel

num

ber

M3 composite image of the Orientale region.

First Lunar Spectrum from C1XS

Radiation Map

Page 17: INDIA'S LUNAR PROGRAMMES Chandrayaan-1 and Beyond

Chandrayaan-2Objectives

Maximal use of Chandrayaan-1 derived data to explore the moon in a more detailed way.

Extend the technologies inherited from Chandrayaan-1

Develop and demonstrate the newer technologies that will be of use for the future planetary missions.

Page 18: INDIA'S LUNAR PROGRAMMES Chandrayaan-1 and Beyond

Chandrayaan-2

• To design, realize and deploy a lunar Lander-rover capable of soft landing on a specified lunar site to enable in situ detection of chemicals, maximally using the data gathered during Chandrayaan-1 mission.

• Carry payloads in the orbiter that will enhance the scientific objective of Chandrayaan-1 and further our understanding of the Moon.

Page 19: INDIA'S LUNAR PROGRAMMES Chandrayaan-1 and Beyond

No Element Mass (kg)

1 Orbiter+ Lander-rover/rover 2457

2 Inter module adopter 40

3 Orbiter with Propellant at liftoff 1317

4 - Orbiter dry mass 487 (50kgs payload)

5 - Propellant for orbiter 830

6 Lander-rover+ rover module in LTTwith Propellant

1100

7 Lander-rover+ rover module on lunarsurface

420

Mass Budget

Page 20: INDIA'S LUNAR PROGRAMMES Chandrayaan-1 and Beyond

Payload Orbiter Solarwind-magneto-tail interaction

Payload Orbiter Detection of low energy charge particle in lunarenvironment

Payload Orbiter Terrain and mineral mapping

Payload Orbiter Chemical mapping

Payload Orbiter Mapping of Radon and other alpha emitter;volatile transport

Payload Orbiter Thermal mapping

Payload Lander-rover Seismic study

Payload Lander-rover Lunar atmospheric abundance study

Payload Orbiter Sub surface analysis

Payload Location and Purpose

Page 21: INDIA'S LUNAR PROGRAMMES Chandrayaan-1 and Beyond

Payload Location Purpose

Regolith Evolved GasAnalyser (REGA)+ MassSpectrometer

Lander-rover Incineration and composition

Sample Analysis andTransfer Mechanisms.

Lander-rover Drilling for sample acquisition

Tunable Diode Laser Lander-rover H2O detection in polar shadowed region

Laser Induced ion MassSpectrometer

Lander-rover same as above

Page 22: INDIA'S LUNAR PROGRAMMES Chandrayaan-1 and Beyond

CHANDRAYAAN-2(Lunar Orbiter, Lander, Rover,

Robotics)

GSLV

Mission Objective

● To design, realize and deploy a lunar Lander-rover capable of soft landing on a specified lunar site for in-situ studies.

● Carry payloads in the orbiter that will enhance and add to the scientific objectives of Chandrayaan-1.● Develop & demonstrate newer technologies, including those that will be useful for future planetary missions (e.g. Sample return).

Orbit management, Intelligent auto-navigation; Realization of Lander, Robotics and Rover; Energy Resources, Communication, sampling and in-situ analysis, Environment (thermal, vacuum …) compatibility

Technological Challenges:

Page 23: INDIA'S LUNAR PROGRAMMES Chandrayaan-1 and Beyond

Mission Profile

Page 24: INDIA'S LUNAR PROGRAMMES Chandrayaan-1 and Beyond

Lander-rover Configuration

Page 25: INDIA'S LUNAR PROGRAMMES Chandrayaan-1 and Beyond

Lander-rover Configuration

Page 26: INDIA'S LUNAR PROGRAMMES Chandrayaan-1 and Beyond

Rover configuration

Page 27: INDIA'S LUNAR PROGRAMMES Chandrayaan-1 and Beyond

International Participation

• A provision of about 20 Kg (10kg in the orbiter and 10kg in the rover) is proposed to be provided for Announcement of Opportunity (AO) payloads from Russia or other international space agencies/ laboratories/universities.

• Several space agencies like European Space Agency (ESA), Canadian Space Agency (CSA), German Space Agency (DLR) and NASA have expressed their interest to participate in Chandrayaan-2 mission. Depending upon the scientific value besides their utility in complementing / supplementing Chandrayaan-2 mission objective, their involvement will be considered.

Page 28: INDIA'S LUNAR PROGRAMMES Chandrayaan-1 and Beyond

Summary• Chandrayaan-1 had a purpose.

– Science, Technical and managerial

• Demonstrates International co-operation with India playing leading role – Meeting targeted science, technical, Budget and schedule

challenges

• Provides Logical extension for Chandrayaan-2 – Lunar Lander with Rover and Future Planetary Missions– Chandrayaan-2 has been already approved by Govt. of India

with the budget allocation of 4.26billion Indian rupees ($ 100m)

• Provides an opportunity for India to work in future planetary missions while working with International partners.

Page 29: INDIA'S LUNAR PROGRAMMES Chandrayaan-1 and Beyond