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MANGALYAN: India’s First Mission to Mars

India's
first mission to Mars left Earth's orbit early on Sunday 01-12-2013 clearing a
critical hurdle in its journey to the red planet and overtaking the efforts in
space of rival Asian giant China.
The success of the spacecraft,
scheduled to orbit Mars by next September, would carry India into a small club,
which includes the United States, Europe, and Russia, whose probes have orbited
or landed on Mars.
India's venture, called Mangalyaan,
faces further more hurdles on its journey to Mars. Fewer than half of missions
to the planet are successful."While Mangalyaan takes 1.2 billion dreams to
Mars, we wish you sweet dreams!" India's space agency said in a tweet soon
after the event, referring to the citizens of the world's second-most populous
country.
China, a keen competitor in the space
race, has considered the possibility of putting a man on the moon sometime
after 2020 and aims to land its first probe on the moon on Monday.
It will deploy a buggy called the
"Jade Rabbit" to explore the lunar surface in a mission that will
also test its deep space communication technologies.
China's Mars probe rode piggyback on a
Russian spacecraft that failed to leave Earth's orbit in November 2011. The
spacecraft crumbled in the atmosphere and its fragments fell into the Pacific
Ocean.
India's mission showcases the country's
cheap technology, encouraging hopes it could capture more of the $304-billion
global space market, which includes launching satellites for other countries,
analysts say. "Given its cost-effective technology, India is
attractive," said Rajeswari Pillai Rajagopalan, an expert on space
security at the Observer Research Foundation think-tank in Delhi.
India's low-cost Mars mission has a
price tag of 4.5 billion rupees, just over a tenth of the cost of NASA's latest
mission there, which launched on November 18.
India's space agency will have to make
a few mid-course corrections to keep the probe on track. Its next big challenge
will be to enter an orbit around Mars next year, a test failed in 2003 by
Japan's probe, which suffered electrical faults as it neared the planet.
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