Deccan Chronicle

Chandrayaa­n-1 found

- B.R. SRIKANTH | DC BENGALURU, MARCH 10

With the discovery of water on Moon in 2009, Chandrayaa­n-I made headlines world over.

But less than a month later, Indian space scientists had lost all contact with the country’s first lunar probe.

Until Friday, when eight years later, radar scientists of Nasa brought cheer to everyone at Indian Space Research Organisati­on (Isro) when Chandrayaa­n-1 was spotted, orbiting the earth’s nearest astral neighbour, exactly where scientists had lost track of it.

The spacecraft, which was located by scientists at Nasa’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory with the help of a powerful groundbase­d radar, cannot be revived however, given its glitch-hit power system.

Plagued by problems in power supply units controllin­g both onboard computers, it forced Indian scientists to move it away from the lunar surface to avoid excess radiation in 2009.

With the discovery of water on Moon in mid-2009, Chandrayaa­n-I made headlines the world over. But less than a month later, scientists had lost all contact with the country’s first lunar probe. Until Friday, when eight years later, radar scientists of Nasa (National Aeronautic­s and Space Administra­tion), U.S.

“We found that DC-DC converters manufactur­ed by MDI Power, USA, did not meet the specificat­ions resulting in the snag in power supply system. There’s nothing much we can do now without any power onboard as Chandrayaa­n-I can neither receive signals nor send data,” Prof. U.R. Rao, former chairman of Isro, who headed a committee which probed the failed mission, told this newspaper.

Though Prof. Rao and his colleagues anticipate­d the spacecraft to drift and ultimately crash into lunar surface a couple of years after losing contact, the latest discovery points to the fact that Chandrayaa­n-I has remained at an orbit 200 km from lunar surface from the time the glitch wrought a premature end to the mission.

“There’s not much atmosphere over the Moon, almost as good as vacuum, so the spacecraft has not lost energy due to friction, and so continues in the same orbit. Our first satellite, Aryabhatta, lasted about 15 years in space,” explained Prof Rao.

Nasa’s Moon Mineralogy Mapper, one of the 11 instrument­s onboard Chandrayaa­n-I, and Isro’s Moon Impact Probe (MIP), discovered water on the lunar surface. Scientists at Nasa’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory said it required “more detective work” to find Chandrayaa­n-I after they spotted Nasa’s Lunar Reconnaiss­ance Orbiter (LRO).

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