ISRO chairman says detection of water on the moon was one of the primary objectives
India's Chandrayaan Mission, which was called off just last month owing to a communications failure, has been termed a complete success by ISRO (Indian Space Research Organisation) chairman, G Madhavan Nair.
He was addressing media persons who were quizzing him regarding the "historic" discovery of water on the moon by NASAs (National Aeronautics and Space Administration) Moon Mineralogy Mapper, a small instrument aboard the Chandrayaan. Apart from calling the discovery of water historic, he added that his earlier statement of the Chandrayaan completing 95 percent of its objectives can now be enhanced to 110 percent because the detection of water on the lunar surface was one of the primary objectives of the mission.
Madhavan said he was very proud of the fact that India was able to make such a significant contribution to science. "All over the world people are applauding the Chandrayaan's achievement. The discovery of water on the moon has been acknowledged as a significant discovery. The main aim of the Chandrayaan1 mission has been achieved," he added. During Chandrayaan's almost year-long rendezvous with the moon, it has been able to collect lots of data, which run into a few thousand Gigabytes, all of which are still in the process of being decoded. In fact, the data is so huge that scientists expect six months to three years before all of them are decoded.
To make things clearer for the layman, Madhavan said that the finding of water on the moon doesn't imply that the moon is filled with lakes and ponds or there is water in the form of a drop. The detection of water is in fact in the form of embedded molecules on the surface and in the lunar rocks. While there are positive signs about the presence of water on the moon, scientists are still perplexed as to how it got there in the first place. A plausible explanation is the effect of asteroids and meteors that might have crashed onto the moon - all of which had some water content in them.
The project director of the Chandrayaan mission said in an interview that it would be possible that the discovery of water on the moon might not be the last of the achievements of the Chandrayaan mission. With thousands of gigabytes of data yet to be analyzed, who knows how many more surprises the mission will throw up!
i think that once again indians had curved out a niche for themselves. a niche which all others can admire. this mission had not only tackled the mybities of our mama (moon) but is also accelerating the manpower to excavate the soul of moon.
thanks.
We got be out of this "India as a nation has done it so it's a success" syndrome. the moon mission may have achieved what ever it did and that may be substantial. However the fact remains that we deviated from our stated objective and hence to that extent it is not a success. The sooner we learn to be objective and put things into perspective, the better it is. It was good but not a COMPLETE success. What harm in saying so.
I don't understand why it would take 1 - 3 years to decode a few terror-bytes, we can easily go and purchase terror-byte hard drives nowadays and while it took a computer with low processing power on the moon to encode it, it should take only a month or 2 on earth with a super computer to decode it.
Well, you fail to understand the difference. The mission being successful or not is separate from the craft failing-- especially after it did its job. albeit not completely. So Chandrayaan the craft failing is NOT equal to th entire lunar mission being termed a failure. Wow. That might be one confusing sentence I just typed.
Why do our scientists and government behave like we're a socialist/communist setup where failure of any sort is intolerable and therefore every mission is always a success irrespective of whether it completes less than half its intended mission cycle.