Author Topic: ISRO - Chandrayaan-3: lunar exploration mission  (Read 171493 times)

Offline FutureSpaceTourist

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Re: ISRO - Chandrayaan-3: lunar exploration mission
« Reply #440 on: 12/05/2023 06:11 am »
https://twitter.com/isro/status/1731872488639152591

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Chandrayaan-3 Mission:

Ch-3's Propulsion Module (PM) takes a successful detour!

In another unique experiment, the PM is brought from Lunar orbit to Earth’s orbit.

An orbit-raising maneuver and a Trans-Earth injection maneuver placed PM in an Earth-bound orbit.

https://www.isro.gov.in/Ch3_Propulsion_Module_moved_from_Lunar_orbit_to_Earth_orbit.html

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Returns to home Earth: Chandrayaan-3 Propulsion Module moved from Lunar orbit to Earth's orbit Home / Chandrayaan-3 Updates
December 04, 2023

In another unique experiment, like the hop experiment on the Vikram Lander, the Propulsion Module (PM) of Chandrayaan-3 was moved from an orbit around Moon to an orbit around Earth.

The primary objective of Chandrayaan-3 mission was to demonstrate soft landing near to lunar south polar region and perform experiments using the instruments on Vikram and Pragyaan.The spacecraft was launched on July 14, 2023 on-board LVM3-M4 vehicle from SDSC, SHAR. On August 23rd Vikram Lander made its historic touch down on Moon and subsequently Pragyan rover was deployed. The scientific instruments in Lander and Rover were operated continuously for 1 lunar day as per the defined mission life. The mission objectives of Chandrayaan-3 have been completely met. With regard to Propulsion Module, the main objective was to ferry the Lander module from GTO to the final lunar polar circular orbit and separate the Lander. Subsequent to separation, Spectro-polarimetry of HAbitable Planet Earth (SHAPE) payload in the PM was also operated. The initial plan was to operate this payload for about three months during the mission life of PM. The precise orbit injection by LVM3 and optimal earth / lunar burn maneuvers, resulted in the availability of over 100 kg of fuel in the PM after over one month of operations in the lunar orbit. It was decided to use the available fuel in the PM to derive additional information for future lunar missions and demonstrate the mission operation strategiesfor a sample return mission.

In order to continue SHAPE payload for Earth observation, it was decided to re-orbit the PM to a suitable Earth orbit.This mission plan was worked out considering the collision avoidance such as preventing the PM from crashing on to the Moon’s surface or entering into the Earth’s GEO belt at 36000 km and orbits below that. Considering the estimated fuel availability and the safety to GEO spacecrafts, the optimal Earth return trajectory was designed for October 2023 month.

First maneuver was performed on October 9, 2023 to raise apolune altitude to 5112 km from 150 km thus, increasing the period of orbit from 2.1 hrs to 7.2 hrs. Later, considering the estimate of available propellant, the second maneuver plan was revised to target an Earth orbit of 1.8 lakhs x 3.8 lakhs km. The Trans-Earthinjection (TEI)maneuver was performed on October 13, 2023. In thepost-TEI maneuver realized orbit, propulsion module made four Moon fly-bys before departing Moon SOI on November 10. Currently, propulsion module is orbiting Earth and crossedits first perigee on November 22nd with an altitude of 1.54 lakhs km. The orbit period is nearly 13 days with 27 deg inclination. The perigee and apogee altitude vary during its trajectory and the predicted minimum perigee altitude is 1.15 lakhs km. Hence as per current orbit prediction, there is no threats of close approach with any operational Earth orbiting satellites.

As per plan, SHAPE payload is being operated whenever Earth is in its field of view. Also, a special operation of the SHAPE payload was carried out on October 28, 2023 during a Solar Eclipse.The Shape payload operations will continue further.

UR Rao Satellite Centre/ISRO’s flight dynamics team has developed an analysis tool from first principles for this operation which is being validated through the return maneuvers carried out for the Chandrayaan-3 PM.

Following are the main outcome from the return maneuvers carried out on CH3 PM related to future missions:

Planning and execution of trajectory and maneuvers to return from Moon to Earth.
Development of a software module to plan such a maneuver and its preliminary validation.
Planning and execution of a gravity assisted flyby across a planets/ celestial body.
Avoiding uncontrolled crashing of the PM on the Moon’s surface at the end of life of PM thus meeting the requirements of no debris creation.

Graphic captions:

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CH-3 PM orbit after the first manoeuvre

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CH-3 PM trajectory for the second manoeuvre

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CH-3 PM Earth arrival trajectory

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CH-3 PM orbit around Earth for next 1 year
« Last Edit: 12/05/2023 06:12 am by FutureSpaceTourist »

Offline sanman

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Re: ISRO - Chandrayaan-3: lunar exploration mission
« Reply #441 on: 05/03/2024 03:33 am »
ISRO posts a high-res pic of Chandrayaan-3's Vikram rover resting on the Moon:

https://twitter.com/this_is_tckb/status/1785878807557099996

Offline Phil Stooke

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Re: ISRO - Chandrayaan-3: lunar exploration mission
« Reply #442 on: 05/03/2024 04:55 am »
Sadly, there is a problem with this post.  If you follow the source you find an Indian media report on this specific image which says it was taken on 15 March 2024, i.e. long after the end of the mission. But ISRO's map of the traverse shows that Pragyan stopped operating about 33 m northwest of the lander (and a second map from one of the instrument PIs puts it in a similar location).  This new image actually shows the long shadow cast by Pragyan's solar panel, parallel to the lander's shadow, in that location.  So the second little bright spot cannot be Pragyan.

Curiously, the latest OHRC image of SLIM shows a similar bright spot near the lander, not corresponding to anything obvious.  I think it may be an artifact, caused by some internal reflection of the lander image perhaps, and showing up just because it is so bright.
Professor Emeritus, University of Western Ontario. Space exploration and planetary cartography, historical and present. A longtime poster on
unmannedspaceflight.com (RIP), now posting content on https://mastodon.social/@PhilStooke and https://discord.com/channels/1290524907624464394 as well as here. The Solar System ain't gonna map itself.

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Re: ISRO - Chandrayaan-3: lunar exploration mission
« Reply #443 on: 05/03/2024 09:20 am »
Also the landing legs' shadow appears to join both bright spots in the orbital image, so they appear to be both coming from the same object (namely Chandrayaan-3's lander).
-DaviD-

Offline Phil Stooke

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Re: ISRO - Chandrayaan-3: lunar exploration mission
« Reply #444 on: 05/03/2024 03:37 pm »
Good point!  Anyway, the bright spot is certainly not Pragyan.
Professor Emeritus, University of Western Ontario. Space exploration and planetary cartography, historical and present. A longtime poster on
unmannedspaceflight.com (RIP), now posting content on https://mastodon.social/@PhilStooke and https://discord.com/channels/1290524907624464394 as well as here. The Solar System ain't gonna map itself.

Offline vivechanam

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Re: ISRO - Chandrayaan-3: lunar exploration mission
« Reply #445 on: 08/21/2024 09:38 pm »
Chandrayaan-3 Pragyan rover finds evidence for lunar molten magma ocean in the south polar region, bolstering the lunar magma ocean hypothesis.

https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-024-02695-w

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-024-07870-7
« Last Edit: 08/21/2024 09:42 pm by vivechanam »

Offline Dalhousie

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Re: ISRO - Chandrayaan-3: lunar exploration mission
« Reply #446 on: 08/24/2024 04:12 am »
Chandrayaan-3 Pragyan rover finds evidence for lunar molten magma ocean in the south polar region, bolstering the lunar magma ocean hypothesis.

https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-024-02695-w

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-024-07870-7

This is confirmation of what has been generally suspected since Apollo.  I remember being taught to existence of a global lunar magma ocean during 1st year geology in 1967 by Prof. David Green, who, along with Prof. Ted Ringwood, had worked on Apollo samples.
Apologies in advance for any lack of civility - it's unintended

Offline Steven Pietrobon

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Re: ISRO - Chandrayaan-3: lunar exploration mission
« Reply #447 on: 08/24/2024 07:35 am »
I've outlined in red what I think is the shadow of Pragyam.
Akin's Laws of Spacecraft Design #1:  Engineering is done with numbers.  Analysis without numbers is only an opinion.

Offline Phil Stooke

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Re: ISRO - Chandrayaan-3: lunar exploration mission
« Reply #448 on: 08/26/2024 10:26 pm »
That is indeed where Pragyan is. In this OHRC image the rover and its shadow are identified. Your image also shows a very long shadow from the Pragyan location, parallel to the lander shadow. The small dot puzzled me at first but as pointed out elsewhere it has to be part of the lander (conceivably a glint off the end of the ramp)
« Last Edit: 08/26/2024 10:30 pm by Phil Stooke »
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Offline FutureSpaceTourist

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Re: ISRO - Chandrayaan-3: lunar exploration mission
« Reply #449 on: 09/23/2024 11:49 am »
https://twitter.com/prlahmedabad/status/1838114779715473808

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"Chandrayaan-3: Pragyan rover discovers ancient 160-km-wide crater on the Moon" The findings have been published in the latest issue of Science Direct by scientists from the @PRLAhmedabad 

The data beamed back by the Pragyan rover from Moon's south polar region has now led to the discovery of an ancient crater.

This significant find occurred as the Pragyan rover traversed the highland terrain

It is approximately 350 kilometres from the South Pole-Aitken basin

It could offer vital clues about the Moon's geological history

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0019103524003890

https://www.indiatoday.in/science/chandrayaan-3/story/chandrayaan-3-pragyan-rover-discovers-ancient-160-km-wide-crater-on-the-moon-2604543-2024-09-22

@isro
@Bhardwaj_A_2016
#Chandrayaan3

Offline tolis

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Re: ISRO - Chandrayaan-3: lunar exploration mission
« Reply #450 on: 09/23/2024 01:46 pm »
Quote
"Chandrayaan-3: Pragyan rover discovers ancient 160-km-wide crater on the Moon" The findings have been published in the latest issue of Science Direct by scientists from the @PRLAhmedabad 

The data beamed back by the Pragyan rover from Moon's south polar region has now led to the discovery of an ancient crater.

This significant find occurred as the Pragyan rover traversed the highland terrain

It is approximately 350 kilometres from the South Pole-Aitken basin

It could offer vital clues about the Moon's geological history

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0019103524003890

https://www.indiatoday.in/science/chandrayaan-3/story/chandrayaan-3-pragyan-rover-discovers-ancient-160-km-wide-crater-on-the-moon-2604543-2024-09-22

@isro
@Bhardwaj_A_2016
#Chandrayaan3

Actually, the work is published in the journal Icarus. ScienceDirect is not a journal and doesn't come in issues.

Offline Phil Stooke

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Re: ISRO - Chandrayaan-3: lunar exploration mission
« Reply #451 on: 10/02/2024 04:04 pm »
Geologists mapping the landing area have discovered the big crater, Pragyan results are not involved in any way. Not to diminish what it accomplished, but let's get it right.
Professor Emeritus, University of Western Ontario. Space exploration and planetary cartography, historical and present. A longtime poster on
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Offline Phil Stooke

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Re: ISRO - Chandrayaan-3: lunar exploration mission
« Reply #452 on: 10/20/2024 09:29 pm »
Rover images were released recently. I have been processing them and trying to understand how the Pragyan rover moved on the surface. There are published maps but they don't agree with each other (or the actual images) very well and no definitive map is yet available. This is the best I have at the moment.

Professor Emeritus, University of Western Ontario. Space exploration and planetary cartography, historical and present. A longtime poster on
unmannedspaceflight.com (RIP), now posting content on https://mastodon.social/@PhilStooke and https://discord.com/channels/1290524907624464394 as well as here. The Solar System ain't gonna map itself.

Offline Phil Stooke

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Re: ISRO - Chandrayaan-3: lunar exploration mission
« Reply #453 on: 11/17/2024 07:00 am »
There are 5 different versions of the Pragyan traverse map so far - and significant differences between them. In an effort to resolve the situation, and using the Pragyan rover images recently released, I have been trying to map the traverse. This map is my current estimate. My impression is that the APXS team maps are more reliable than the others.

Professor Emeritus, University of Western Ontario. Space exploration and planetary cartography, historical and present. A longtime poster on
unmannedspaceflight.com (RIP), now posting content on https://mastodon.social/@PhilStooke and https://discord.com/channels/1290524907624464394 as well as here. The Solar System ain't gonna map itself.

Offline Phil Stooke

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Re: ISRO - Chandrayaan-3: lunar exploration mission
« Reply #454 on: 12/10/2024 11:46 pm »
While preparing some material for LPSC, I have been looking at Chandrayaan 3 images of the horizon. Pragyan took images to plan drives, not for horizon mapping, but there are enough images that they can be assembled into a nearly complete horizon panorama. They are taken from different locations so the foregrounds don't match and only the horizon can be trusted. Here is a view of the horizon projected into a circle to show the azimuths to various features.
Professor Emeritus, University of Western Ontario. Space exploration and planetary cartography, historical and present. A longtime poster on
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Offline Phil Stooke

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Re: ISRO - Chandrayaan-3: lunar exploration mission
« Reply #455 on: 12/22/2024 07:12 am »
Here is an updated version of the Chandrayaan 3 horizon panorama. A is a synthetic panorama from ACT Quickmap, used to align the panorama sections. B is the panorama. C is the panorama with a c. 4x vertical stretch to show subtle features more clearly. D is the circular projection and E is a map showing where some horizon features are.
Professor Emeritus, University of Western Ontario. Space exploration and planetary cartography, historical and present. A longtime poster on
unmannedspaceflight.com (RIP), now posting content on https://mastodon.social/@PhilStooke and https://discord.com/channels/1290524907624464394 as well as here. The Solar System ain't gonna map itself.

Offline AndrewM

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Re: ISRO - Chandrayaan-3: lunar exploration mission
« Reply #456 on: 06/14/2025 09:53 pm »
A paper using data from Chandrayaan 3's ChaSTE experiments reports that surface temperatures were ~25K higher than expected. It then suggests that this could be used to help gather water ice.

https://www.nature.com/articles/s43247-025-02114-6 [Mar 6]

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Here, we provide the in-situ temperatures of top 10 cm of a high-latitude lunar regolith measured by Chandra’s Surface Thermophysical Experiment(ChaSTE), a thermal probe on-board Chandrayaan-3 lander. The surface peak temperature of 355 K from ChaSTE is higher than expected(330 K) owing to its deployment on a sunward illuminated local slope region of 6°.

 

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