This Article is From Feb 11, 2014

India's Mars mission successfully completes 100 days in space tomorrow

India's Mars mission successfully completes 100 days in space tomorrow

The spacecraft was launched by the country's workhorse rocket PSLV-C25 on November 5 last from Satish Dhawan Space Centre at Sriharikota in Andhra Pradesh (File photo)

Bangalore: India's first inter-planetary probe Mars Orbiter Spacecraft will be completing 100 days in
space tomorrow in its voyage towards the red planet.

The health of the spacecraft, launched by the country's workhorse rocket PSLV-C25 on November 5 last from Satish Dhawan Space Centre at Sriharikota in Andhra Pradesh, was described as "normal" by Indian Space Research Organisation.

ISRO said health parameters of all the payloads are normal and the spacecraft is presently at a radio distance of 16 million km causing a one-way communication delay of approximately 55 seconds.

After travelling the remaining distance of about 490 million km over the next 210 days, the spacecraft would be inserted into the Martian Orbit on September 24.

Subsequent to six orbit raising manoeuvres around the Earth following the launch, the Trans Mars Injection (TMI) manoeuvre on December last gave necessary thrust to the spacecraft to escape from Earth and to initiate the journey towards Mars, in a helio-centric Orbit.

This journey is long wherein the spacecraft has to travel 680 million km out of which a travel of 190 million km is completed so far, ISRO said in a release. Pointing out that the first Trajectory Correction
Manoeuvre (TCM) was conducted on December 11, ISRO said,"The trajectory of the spacecraft, till today, is as expected."

Three more TCM operations are planned around April 2014, August 2014 and September 2014. The spacecraft is continuously monitored by the ground station of ISRO Telemetry, Tracking and Command Network (ISTRAC), located at Byalalu, near Bangalore.

"Except for a 40 minute break in the Telemetry data received from the spacecraft to the ground station, data has been continuously available for all the 100 days." Explaining that the propulsion system of the spacecraft is configured for TCMs and the Mars Orbit Insertion Operation, it said on February 6 that all the five payloads on Mars Orbiter spacecraft were switched 'ON' to check their health.

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