MUMBAI: There will be a nail-biting fortnight
in June for the Isro team because there will be absolutely no communication
with the Mars Orbiter Mission (MOM) during that period.
"It (the communication break) will be for
the first time for such a long period since its launch on November 5,
2013," former Isro chairman K Radhakrishnan said at the Indian Science
Congress on Friday.
In a question-and-answer session with former
Isro scientist Pramod Kale at the first plenary meeting of the 102nd edition of
the congress, Radhakrishnan said that the blackout will be the result of an
eclipse.
MOM project director Subbiah Arunan, who is
scheduled to address the congress on Monday, said the blackout will be from
June 8 to 22 because the Sun will come between Earth and Mars, blocking the
view of the red planet.
Arunan said that during the blackout data
cannot be transmitted to the spacecraft or downlinked. "MOM will be fully
in autonomous mode," he said.
Arunan said the scenario had been tested in
the mission simulation tests.
"There have been many manoeuvres when there has been a communication blackout, but this is the first time it is happening for as long as 14 day," Arunan said. "We are confident that there will be no problems."
"There have been many manoeuvres when there has been a communication blackout, but this is the first time it is happening for as long as 14 day," Arunan said. "We are confident that there will be no problems."
Arunan said in May 2016 there will be what is
known as a "whiteout" period when Earth will come between the Sun and
Mars, blocking communication with the spacecraft for about a fortnight again.
Radhakrishnan, who retired on Wednesday, told
the large gathering of students and scientists that the quality of data
downloaded from the five payloads on board MOM was excellent. "After a
series of reviews, they will get published," he said.
Moving to other matters, he said the cryogenic
stage for the new LVM 3 rocket would be ready in two years and will be three
times more powerful than the existing ones.
He said that 300 industrial firms were participating
in the space programme, Radhakrishnan said they were looking for centres of
excellence in space technology in the academic world. To a question about the
human space flight programme, he said some more developments had to take place
before the country could declare itself ready for such a mission.
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