You all probably have heard of the name “ISRO (Indian Space Research Organisation).” Yes, this is our own Space Research Organisation, similar to United State of America’s “NASA (National Aeronautics and Space Administration)” or “European Space Agency.” Let’s get straight to the facts about ISRO –
1. Foundation Date Of ISRO
Maybe the greatest fact about ISRO is that it was established on 15th August in 1969 by Vikram Sarabhai.
2. Aryabhata
ISRO’s first satellite ever, Aryabhata was launched on 19th April, 1975 from Soviet Union.
3. Reaching Mars
Reaching the red planet aka Mars on the first try is ISRO’s biggest achievement till date. And what’s more interesting is that no country or any space organisation have been able to reach Mars on the first try.
4. Chandrayaan – 1
India’s first lunar orbiter, Chandrayaan-1 was launched by ISRO in 2008. ISRO made Chandrayaan-1 on a budget of $80 million (₹386 crore at that time). For comparison, China’s lunar orbiter, Chang’e 1(in 2007) costed $187 million.
5. Mars Orbiter Mission aka Mangalyaan
ISRO’s spaceship to the Mars, Mars Orbiter Mission (MOM) aka Mangalyaan which was launched on 5th November, 2013 and is currently orbiting the red planet since 24th September, 2014.
6. Founding Water On Earth
By collecting data from Chandrayaan-1’s Moon Mineralogy Mapper (M3) instrument, NASA concluded that they have found magmatic water or water that originates from deep within the lunar surface. So all hail ISRO.
7. ISRO Becomes The Member Of An Elite Group
With the successful mission to Mars last year, ISRO became the fourth space agency to reach Mars after NASA, European Space Agency, Soviet Space Program. You will be even more proud to know that countries like Japan, China who are far superior in terms of technology have tried to reach Mars but failed to do so.
(How ISRO’s carrier rockets improved over years)
8. Indian Regional Navigation Satellite System (IRNSS)
Call me mad or anything but according to me, this is the most important thing that has to be done immediately. The GPS you use daily is very much related with this. To use GPS, we still have to rely on foreign satellites and that means our data is going to foreign countries. To have our own GPS system, a total of 7 satellites is needed. With the successful launch of “IRNSS-1D” on 28th March, 2015, ISRO have successfully launched 4 satellites out of the 7 and they will launch the remaining 3 within 2016. So you will be using your own country’s GPS system on or before 2017.
(Coverage of IRNSS once completed)
9. The Cost Of Mars Mission
You will be shocked to know that ISRO’s Mars mission only costed $74 million or ₹4,813,330,000/-. For comparison recent Hollywood superhero-movie, Avengers 2’s budget was a whooping $279.9 million.
10. Earning On Its Own
Till date, ISRO has earned near about $100 million by successfully launching 45 foreign satellites and they will launch another 28 foreign satellites within 2015-2017 which will surely benefit ISRO.
source: rjcj
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Nice post
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