Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Vikram lander not in ‘field of view’, NASA orbiter camera fails to capture its image

- Anonna Dutt

EXPERTS SAY THE CHANCES OF THE LRO SPOTTING THE LANDER DURING THE CURRENT FLYOVER ARE SMALL

NEWDELHI: Even as Indians pinned their hopes on NASA for getting one more glimpse of the Vikram lander before the lunar night begins, the US space agency has said that the lander may not have been in the field of view of the camera on-board its orbiter.

NASA’S Lunar Reconnaiss­ance Orbiter (LRO), which has been orbiting the moon for 10 years, passed over the Vikram landing site on Tuesday. “The Lunar Reconnaiss­ance Orbiter Camera (LROC) acquired images around the targeted landing site, but the exact location of the lander was not known so the lander may not be in the camera field of view,” said Joshua A Handal, public affairs officer, planetary science division, NASA, in an email.

Indian Space Research Organisati­on (Isro) lost contact with the lander of the country’s second lunar mission Chandrayaa­n-2, minutes before touchdown on the moon on September 7.

The LROC team will compare the images taken on September 17 with previous ones of the site taken by it to see if the lander is visible. The results of the flyover will be made public after validation, analysis, and review.

Currently, it is the lunar dusk at the site where Vikram was supposed to make a soft-landing on September 7. This means the sun is lower in the horizon with relief features casting long shadows.

“LRO flew over the area of the Vikram landing site on Sept. 17 when the local lunar time was near dusk; large shadows covered much of the area... It [the lander] may be in the shadow...,” Handal said.

Experts agree that the chances of the LRO spotting the lander during the current flyover are small. “It will be difficult to find the lander during the current flyover as the angle of the sun will be low. And, if the lander is close to any relief feature, then the lander will get hidden in its shadow. The LRO will have better chances of getting a good image of the lander during its next flyover,” said Jatan Mehta, a former science officer with Teamindus, a Bengaluru-based private company that aims to send a lander-rover to the moon. The NASA orbiter will fly over the landing site again on October 14, which would be close to lunar noon and the lighting conditions would be favourable for getting better images.

“LRO will next fly over the landing site on October 14 when lighting conditions will be more favourable,”handal said.

By then, any hopes of communicat­ing with the lander would be lost as the lunar night, which begins on September 21, will lead to temperatur­es in the area plummeting to -180 degree.“once the lunar night kicks in, there is absolutely no possibilit­y of re-establishi­ng communicat­ion. The lander-rover was to conduct all the experiment­s during the lunar day and is not designed to withstand the low temperatur­es,” said Mehta.

A flyover of the NASA orbiter above the landing site does not help in re-establishi­ng communicat­ion; it helps the scientists in understand­ing what went wrong.

Isro had also taken thermal images of the lander just a day after the landing went awry, which have not been released yet.

“Images taken by its own orbiter and that of NASA will help ISRO in reconstruc­ting what happened on September 7...,” said Dr Nirupam Roy, assistant professor of Physics at the Indian Institute of Science, Bengaluru.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India