Bengaluru, August 25, Jankranti News, : — Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO) has given another good news to the country which is celebrating the success of Chandrayaan-3 launch. ISRO (Indian Space Research Organisation) has recently revealed that it is going to do another prestigious project this year, just as we are conducting research on the moon through the Chandrayaan-3 launch, from now on we are preparing to fully know about the sun. ISRO announced that Aditya L-1 mission will be launched on September 2. Aditya L-1 is already ready for launch, it will take off on September 2nd from “Satish Dhawan Space Center” in Sriharikota, Andhra Pradesh, carrying the PSLV rocket Aditya L-1 will go into orbit close to the Sun, said Nilesh M Desai, Director of ISRO Space Application Center in Ahmedabad.
ISRO Aditya L-1 is conducting the experiment to know the birth of Sun and the conditions there. It will be launched into a long hypercircular orbit at Longrage Point-1 (L-1), 15 lakh kilometers from Earth. Aditya L-1 will reach this orbit after about 127 days of travel. Through this satellite we can observe the solar system from a very close distance. So one can study solar storms, birth of sun, climate and conditions there.
This is the first observatory spacecraft that India is sending to do research on the Sun in Rhodes. This will reveal important details about the solar system. It consists of seven payloads. These may focus on images of the Sun, and spectroscopy, via the “Visible Emission Line Coronagraph Payload”. Through this we can know more about where the sun gets its energy from.
Key Features of Aditya L-1,””
✦ Research on Sun will be done from L-1 point which is 15 lakh km from Earth.
✦ This is India’s first spacecraft to study the Sun.
✦ The Aditya L1 launch will be carried out using the Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV).
✦ Aditya L1 will take 127 days to enter the fixed orbit at the L-1 point.
✦ Launching at the L-1 point enables Aditya L1 to continuously monitor the Sun.
✦ Aditya L1 focuses on the Sun’s corona (outermost part of the Sun’s atmosphere), studying infrared rays, photosphere (soft, hard X-ray), chromosphere (ultraviolet), solar emission, solar wind, heat, coronal mass ejection.
✦ Aditya L1 has a total of seven payloads. Four of these will directly probe the Sun. The other three are used to study the climate at the L-1 point
—– M Venkata T Reddy, News Editor, MP Jankranti News,