India's Space Program

Toroid

Founding Member
Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) has developed a orbiter, lander & rover that will be sent to the south side of the moon to search for water and Helium-3.
The Quest to Find a Trillion-Dollar Nuclear Fuel on the Moon
Chandrayaan-2 - Wikipedia
India’s space program wants to go where no nation has gone before -– to the south side of the moon. And once it gets there, it will study the potential for mining a source of waste-free nuclear energy that could be worth trillions of dollars.

The nation’s equivalent of NASA will launch a rover in October to explore virgin territory on the lunar surface and analyze crust samples for signs of water and helium-3. That isotope is limited on Earth yet so abundant on the moon that it theoretically could meet global energy demands for 250 years if harnessed.

“The countries which have the capacity to bring that source from the moon to Earth will dictate the process,’’ said K. Sivan, chairman of the Indian Space Research Organisation. “I don’t want to be just a part of them, I want to lead them.’’

The mission would solidify India’s place among the fleet of explorers racing to the moon, Mars and beyond for scientific, commercial or military gains. The governments of the U.S., China, India, Japan and Russia are competing with startups and billionaires Elon Musk, Jeff Bezos and Richard Branson to launch satellites, robotic landers, astronauts and tourists into the cosmos.

The rover landing is one step in an envisioned series for ISRO that includes putting a space station in orbit and, potentially, an Indian crew on the moon. The government has yet to set a timeframe.

“We are ready and waiting,’’ said Sivan, an aeronautics engineer who joined ISRO in 1982. “We’ve equipped ourselves to take on this particular program.’’

China is the only country to put a lander and rover on the moon this century with its Chang’e 3 mission in 2013. The nation plans to return later this year by sending a probe to the unexplored far side.

In the U.S., President Donald Trump signed a directive calling for astronauts to return to the moon, and NASA’s proposed $19 billion budget this fiscal year calls for launching a lunar orbiter by the early 2020s.

ISRO’s estimated budget is less than a 10th of that – about $1.7 billion – but accomplishing feats on the cheap has been a hallmark of the agency since the 1960s. The upcoming mission will cost about $125 million – or less than a quarter of Snap Inc. co-founder Evan Spiegel’s compensation last year, the highest for an executive of a publicly traded company, according to the Bloomberg Pay Index.

This won’t be India’s first moon mission. The Chandrayaan-1 craft, launched in October 2008, completed more than 3,400 orbits and ejected a probe that discovered molecules of water in the surface for the first time.

The upcoming launch of Chandrayaan-2 includes an orbiter, lander and a rectangular rover. The six-wheeled vehicle, powered by solar energy, will collect information for at least 14 days and cover an area with a 400-meter radius.

The rover will send images to the lander, and the lander will transmit those back to ISRO for analysis.

A primary objective, though, is to search for deposits of helium-3. Solar winds have bombarded the moon with immense quantities of helium-3 because it’s not protected by a magnetic field like Earth is.

The presence of helium-3 was confirmed in moon samples returned by the Apollo missions, and Apollo 17 astronaut Harrison Schmitt, a geologist who walked on the moon in December 1972, is an avid proponent of mining helium-3.

“It is thought that this isotope could provide safer nuclear energy in a fusion reactor, since it is not radioactive and would not produce dangerous waste products,’’ the European Space Agency said.

There are an estimated 1 million metric tons of helium-3 embedded in the moon, though only about a quarter of that realistically could be brought to Earth, said Gerald Kulcinski, director of the Fusion Technology Institute at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and a former member of the NASA Advisory Council.

That’s still enough to meet the world’s current energy demands for at least two, and possibly as many as five, centuries, Kulcinski said. He estimated helium-3’s value at about $5 billion a ton, meaning 250,000 tons would be worth in the trillions of dollars.

To be sure, there are numerous obstacles to overcome before the material can be used – including the logistics of collection and delivery back to Earth and building fusion power plants to convert the material into energy. Those costs would be stratospheric.

“If that can be cracked, India should be a part of that effort,’’ said Lydia Powell, who runs the Centre for Resources Management at the New Delhi-based Observer Research Foundation think tank. “If the cost makes sense, it will become a game-changer, no doubt about it.’’

Plus, it won’t be easy to mine the moon. Only the U.S. and Luxembourg have passed legislation allowing commercial entities to hold onto what they have mined from space, said David Todd, head of space content at Northampton, England-based Seradata Ltd. There isn’t any international treaty on the issue.

“Eventually, it will be like fishing in the sea in international waters,’’ Todd said. “While a nation-state cannot hold international waters, the fish become the property of its fishermen once fished.’’

India’s government is reacting to the influx of commercial firms in space by drafting legislation to regulate satellite launches, company registrations and liability, said GV Anand Bhushan, a Chennai-based partner at the Shardul Amarchand Mangaldas & Co. law firm. It doesn’t cover moon mining.

Yet the nation’s only spaceman isn’t fully on board with turning the moon into a place of business.

Rakesh Sharma, who spent almost eight days aboard a Russian spacecraft in 1984, said nations and private enterprises instead should work together to develop human colonies elsewhere as Earth runs out of resources and faces potential catastrophes such as asteroid strikes.

“You can’t go to the moon and draw boundaries,’’ Sharma said. “I want India to show that we’re capable of utilizing space technology for the good of people.’’

chandrayaan-2-configuratie.jpg
 

Gambeir

Celestial
That's all good and fine but this isn't gonna happen. These poor people, don't they get it, that real estate is already claimed. They must be delusional. They need to scale there dreams back about 100 fold.

I'm just going to chalk that idea up to another failed dream.

Of course there's no promise this contraption is going to work out either, a cross between a hand bag and a go~cart to deliver pizza's, of course how this is all going to work out when even the delivery drivers have no jobs is a completely different matter. What's the plan? Honestly, these egg heads and their microsoft implanted scrambled egg dreams.

Yet again India is going to go to the moon huh? Maybe figuring out how to pay for robotically delivered pizzas might a priority before we go off to the moon? Just saying ya know.


1400x-1.jpg

Delivering pizzas instead of people, this robot could make on-demand orders profitable.
Nuro’s Driverless Cars Don’t Have to Worry About Passenger Safety

It's kind of cute but ya know this is just never going to work out as planned either. In fact this is even more delusional than India's lunatic lunar dream. Kids will be jumping on these things for a free ride, over~turning them, and stoning them for sport. These two boobs, standing there posing by this like they had landed on the moon are just clueless; they need to be designing delivery vehicles that resemble a Panzer, not a piece of samsonite luggage. Idiots~
1400x-1.jpg
 
Last edited:

Gambeir

Celestial
Anyways, back to India's space plan. I don't know how more delusional you can get. Just look at the photo's of the Falcon 9 that was blown up by that Flying Beach Ball. They aren't going to the moon until they know what that flying basket ball really is. Going to the moon, what a laugh, believe that one when I see it.

iu
 
Last edited:

Gambeir

Celestial
National UFO Reporting Center
The Pissed Off Ball Tribe of Outer Space.

West Paris, Maine, Monday, April 2nd, 2018, @ 5:00 p.m. (Eastern)—An adult male was viewing deer in a nearby field, when he noticed a spherical object, estimated by the witness to have been approximately 16 inches in diameter, pass by him at high speed. He witnessed the object for only seconds. The witness seemed to us to be sincere and sober-minded
http://www.nuforc.org/webreports/139/S139344.html

Ft. Collins, Colorado, Sunday, April 08th, 2018, @ 01:30 a.m. (Mountain)—A young man asserts that while walking home through his neighborhood, he becomes aware of a bright white “star” in the night sky. In very short order, the witness reports, the object descended to ground level, and its color changed from bright white, to red. The object then ascended rapidly back up into the night sky. The witness estimates that when the object was at its closest to his location, it appeared to him to be approximately the size of a basketball. The next morning, a reddened area, or “scoop mark,” was evident on his right hand. The origin of the wound was a mystery to the witness.
http://www.nuforc.org/webreports/139/S139439.html

Yet again, India is going to the moon? Right...

Siletz (rural), Oregon, Wednesday, June 06, 2018, @ 7:30 p.m. (PDT)—Four witnesses report having seen a gray, bi-pedal, creature in a remote forest setting on the outskirts of Siletz, Oregon. The principal witness was a 12-year old girl, who reports having witnessed the gray creature on three separate occasions.
http://www.nuforc.org/webreports/141/S141858.html

image001.jpg
 
Last edited:

humanoidlord

ce3 researcher
pretty good, lets hope trump's space force plan doesn't come in function, otherwise space will become a warzone and stuff like this will not be permitted
 

Toroid

Founding Member
The launch of Chandrayaan-2 mission is set for mid July.
India sets July launch date for moon landing attempt
Officials in India have announced that their mission to land on the surface of the moon now is scheduled for mid-July, according to news reports.

The Chandrayaan-2 mission consists of an orbiter, lander and rover that will explore the moon's south pole. It is now set to launch from Sriharikota -- a barrier island off the Bay of Bengal --between July 9 and July 16. It would land on the moon Sept. 6, according to The Times of India, an English-language daily newspaper based in Mumbai.

If the landing is successful, India would become the fourth country to land on the moon. Israel tried to nab that title in April, but then its Beresheet spacecraft failed about 500 feet from the surface and crashed.

India's rover, named Prayan, will analyze the surface and gather both images and data from the area, according to the newspaper.

Chandrayaan-2 initially was scheduled to launch last year, but faced repeated delays. The mission follows the country's Chandrayaan-1, which was intentionally crashed into the moon in 2008.

The United States remains the only country to leave human footprints on the moon. The other two countries that have successfully landed probes on the surface are the Soviet Union in September 1959 and China in December 2013 and January 2019.
 

Toroid

Founding Member
India aborts Moon mission launch, citing technical glitch
India aborted the launch on Monday of a spacecraft intended to land on the far side of the moon less than an hour before liftoff.



The Chandrayaan-2 mission was called off when a "technical snag" was observed in the 640-ton, 14-story rocket launcher, Indian Space Research Organization spokesman B.R. Guruprasad said.


The countdown abruptly stopped at T-56 minutes, 24 seconds, and Guruprasad said that the agency would announce a revised launch date soon.

AP19195810348933.jpg

Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO)'s launch vehicle carrying Chandrayaan-2 standing at Satish Dhawan Space Center after the mission was aborted. (AP Photo/Manish Swarup)

Chandrayaan, the word for "moon craft" in Sanskrit, is designed for a soft landing on the lunar south pole and to send a rover to explore water deposits confirmed by a previous Indian space mission.


With nuclear-armed India poised to become the world's fifth-largest economy, the ardently nationalist government of Prime Minister Narendra Modi is eager to show off the country's prowess in security and technology. If India did manage the soft landing, it would be only the fourth to do so after the U.S., Russia and China.

Dr. K. Sivan, chairman of the Indian Space Research Organization, said at a news conference last week that the around $140-million Chandrayaan-2 mission was the nation's most prestigious to date, in part because of the technical complexities of soft landing on the lunar surface -- an event he described as "15 terrifying minutes."

Video
After countdown commenced on Sunday, Sivan visited two Hindu shrines to pray for the mission's success.

Practically since its inception in 1962, India's space program has been criticized as inappropriate for an overpopulated, developing nation.

But decades of space research have allowed India to develop satellite, communications and remote sensing technologies that are helping solve everyday problems at home, from forecasting fish migration to predicting storms and floods.

With the 50th anniversary of the Apollo 11 mission this month, the world's biggest space agencies are returning their gaze to the moon, seen as ideal testing grounds for technologies required for deep space exploration, and, with the confirmed discovery of water, as a possible pit stop along the way.
 

Toroid

Founding Member

Toroid

Founding Member
India's lunar lander appears to have crashed into the moon.
India's Prime Minister embraces tearful rocket scientist as Chandrayaan-2 moon lander is feared lost | Daily Mail Online
Chandrayaan-2 entered lunar orbit two weeks ago and completed five orbits
  • It began powered descent just before 4:10 p.m. ET today, according to plan
  • But soon after, communication between the lander and ground station was lost
  • It's unclear if the lander survived descent, though many suspect it crashed

www.youtube.com/watch?v=s9duvYP7-PA
 
Top