NASA INVITES INDIA TO
JOINTLY EXPLORE MARS
In future,
India and the U.S. could jointly explore Mars and who knows an Indian astronaut
could also head to the Red planet on a joint mission.India’s maiden mission to
the Red Planet, Mangalyaan, has opened the eyes of the world on ISRO’s
capabilities at undertaking low cost, high value inter-planetary mission.Charles
Elachi, director of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory or JPL, a part of NASA and an
institution better known for piloting most of the American planetary
exploration efforts with rovers like Curiosity, says India and the U.S. could
jointly explore Mars and even invited India to send astronauts to the Red
Planet.
We hope so
that it will be the case in the future. At NASA, we are just beginning to plan
for next mission to Mars for the next decade, which is 2020-2030. In fact
shortly, there is a meeting in Washington on possible collaborations for the
next 5-6 mission to Mars and ISRO is invited for that meeting. This is in
preparation for the ultimate human space flight to Mars. We clearly hope that
India would be interested. Hopefully, India will be part of the consortium
between U.S., Europe, France, Italy among others where all can capitalise on
our capabilities to explore the solar system.
NASA has invited international agencies to start thinking
together on how to send humans to Mars and beyond. So clearly that is an area
where there will be collaboration between India and the US considering the
capability that India has, by showing that it can meaningfully contribute to
international endeavours.When India launched its mission to Mars, and I
congratulate India on a superb mission by reaching the orbit or Mars in the
very first attempt, JPL supported ISRO in the navigation and communication
because of the antennas we have.Reaching the Mars orbit in first attempt was an
amazing achievement and that too at such low cost. Now American scientists
through its MAVEN mission and India through its Mars Orbiter Mission are
sharing data.
We are
looking at a mission using electric propulsion, which is a major advancement in
technology, to capture an asteroid and bring it back to lunar orbit so that
astronauts can go and do deeper exploration. NASA has opened the door for
potential interest, be it from India or Europe. We are in a very early stage of
planning so that is clearly an opportunity for more collaboration with India.I
think they are heading for a very positive future, from five years ago the
interest has now tremendously expanded. There is now good will both politically
and scientifically, I am very optimistic about the future in space
collaboration. Space is for everybody, the good will between two countries
makes space a natural place to work together.The two can cooperate even in
astronomy, India has a long history in astronomy. I visited the ancient
observatory made by Indians (at Jantar Mantar) that is a few hundred years old
that furthered knowledge and now we can do it together. India has a great
tradition of learning.
We have a
mission called NASA—ISRO Synthetic Aperture Radar (NISAR) mission. This is a
major mission that will be launched in 2020. Here we are really collaborating
as equals, between India and the U.S. This mission will allow us to look at
natural resources across the world, natural hazards like tectonic motion,
climate impact and climate change. This is of direct day-to-day benefit for
life both in USA and India. This came up as collaboration among scientists but
is now a full-fledged approved joint mission between both countries.This is a
RADAR mission, that has the capability to take a picture of the land, and then
you come back a few days later and take another picture. In the meantime, if
there was a change even down to a scale of a few centimeters we can detect it
from space.This gives you a picture of the motion that has occurred as result
of an earthquake or mudslide. This will allow us to better understand the physics
behind an earthquake.This is of direct benefit be it for India or California
where we see tectonic activity as well. The two main RADAR instruments are
being developed by NASA and ISRO, the satellite bus will be Indian and it will
be fabricated in India and then it will be launched using the Indian rocket the
Geo-synchronous Satellite Launch Vehicle. This time we are truly collaborating
as equals.
Prof. John Kurakar
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