City
Epaper

ISRO Chairman offers prayers for success of Aditya L1

By IANS | Updated: September 1, 2023 19:10 IST

Tirupati (Andhra Pradesh), Sep 1 The Chairman of Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO), S. Somanath, on Friday offered ...

Open in App

Tirupati (Andhra Pradesh), Sep 1 The Chairman of Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO), S. Somanath, on Friday offered prayers at a temple near the Satish Dhawan Space Centre, Sriharikota, for the success of India’s rocket mission to the Sun.

Ahead of the crucial launch of the Aditya L1 mission scheduled on Saturday, aimed at studying the Sun, Somanath offered prayers at the Chengalamma Parameshwari temple near the spaceport.

“I came here to pray to Chengalamma Parameshwari for giving us strength to make this launch successful,” he told reporters after offering prayers.

Earlier, a group of ISRO scientists had offered prayers at the Tirumala temple on Friday morning.

Somanath said the countdown has started for the PSLV-C57 Aditya-L1 mission, which will be launched at 11.50 a.m. on Saturday.

“It will take almost an hour for the satellite to reach the required location and inject. The Aditya L1 mission is to study the Sun. It will take another 125 days to travel from Earth to the L1 point from where the satellite will look at the Sun,” he said.

Replying to another query, the ISRO chief said the date for Chandrayaan-4 has not been decided yet.

“We will announce soon. Something is there,” he said with a smile.

On the Chandrayaan-3 mission, Somanath said that lunar rover Pragyan is working very well, moving around the Moon and doing rotations which will go on till September 3.

Earlier, some scientists from the space agency visited the Sri Venkateswara temple atop Tirumala hills on Friday morning and prayed for the success of the Aditya L1 mission .

The Aditya-L1 spacecraft is designed for providing remote observations of the solar corona and in situ observations of the solar wind at L1 (Sun-Earth Lagrangian point), which is about 1.5 million km from the Earth.

The first space-based Indian observatory to study the Sun would be launched by a PSLV-C57 rocket.

It’s a common practice for the ISRO scientists to offer prayers at the famous hill shrine ahead of major missions.

In July, they had performed 'puja' at the temple with a miniature model of Chandrayaan-3.

The Moon mission scripted history by successfully landing on the lunar surface on August 23, as India became the only country to accomplish soft landing on the Moon’s South Pole.

--IANS

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: congresspitrodadelhimodideepikabjpwest-bengaldeepika-padukoneajay-devgnthakur
Open in App

Related Stories

NationalCity Living Redefined: The Rise of Used Cars in Delhi’s Lifestyle Trends

BusinessReliance Power & Infra Shares Again Hit 5% Lower Circuit; Anil Ambani To Appear Before ED Today

NationalDelhi Crime: Girl Shot Dead Inside Doctor’s Clinic in Jahangirpuri; Attacker on the Run

NationalDelhi Crime: Man Allegedly Shoots Caretaker After Heated Argument in Fatehpur Beri, Accused Arrested

NationalPriyajit Ghosh, 22-Year-Old Bengal Cricketer, Dies of Heart Attack During Gym Session

National Realted Stories

NationalReports on private entities getting permission to mine atomic minerals incorrect: Govt

NationalNSA Ajit Doval in Moscow amid US tariff threat over India's Russian oil purchases

NationalUttarakhand Landslide: Motor Route to Kedarnath and Badrinath Highway Obstructed, Yatra on Hold After Heavy Rainfall

NationalCop hacked to death by father-son duo at AIADMK MLA’s estate in TN's Tiruppur

NationalKedarnath Yatra halted, schools shut as torrential rain wreaks havoc in U'khand