Vikrant Shekhawat : Aug 28, 2023, 06:08 PM
Sun Mission ISRO: After the success of Chandrayaan-3, now the Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO) is going to take a new step. He has informed on Monday that Aditya L1 spacecraft will be launched from Sriharikota in Andhra Pradesh on September 2 at 11.50 am. This mission will be launched from PSLV-C57 rocket, which aims to study the mysteries of the Sun. as well as to investigate chromospheric and coronal heating, the physics of partially ionized plasma, and the initiation of coronal mass ejections and flares. At the same time, Aditya L-1 will be the first Indian space-based observatory to study the Sun.The spacecraft will also observe in-situ particles and plasma environments to collect data on particle dynamics emanating from the Sun. This will help in the discovery of the physics of the solar corona and its heating mechanism. ISRO will be able to keep an eye on how the sun works through this observatory. Actually, there are 5 Lagrangian points between the Earth and the Sun's system. Lagrangian points are two points in space at which the force between any two objects becomes equal.Aditya L1 will go to Lagrangian point-1ISRO's sent Sun mission i.e. Aditya L1 spacecraft will go to Lagrangian Point-1 and will be stationed in Halo Orbit. It has been told that the distance of Lagrangian point-1 from the earth is about 1.5 million kilometers. If the distance of the sun from the earth is seen, then it is 15 crore kilometers.Chandrayaan-3 landed on the South Pole of the MoonISRO is constantly touching new heights. He recently created history on 23rd August. The space agency landed Chandrayaan-3 on the south pole of the Moon. India became the first country in the world to do this because no one had reached the south pole of the Moon yet. Earlier, Russia, America and China had stepped on the moon, but they did not land on the South Pole.