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Posted: Sun 23:28, 01 Dec 2013
Post subject: K.R. Sridhara Murthi
India announces Nov. 5 as launch date for country's first Mars mission
NEW DELHI, Oct. 23 () -- India says it is preparing to join a very exclusive club -- those countries that have successfully sent a space probe to the planet Mars.India is expecting to launch a spacecraft toward the Red Planet on Nov. 5,[url=http://www.trueireligion.com]True Religion Jeans Outlet[/url], officials with the country's space agency said.While India's space program has so far focused on aiding the country's development with Earth-observing satellites to spot potential sources of groundwater and monitor deforestation, in 2008 it launched a lunar orbiter.It has announced proposals for further probes to study the moon and space weather.Such space missions could lead to new applications in other research areas and encourage a new generation of scientists and engineers, K.R. Sridhara Murthi, who worked at the Indian Space Research Organization for nearly 40 years, told NewsScientist.com.With the announced $73 million Mars Orbiter Mission India hope to show it can put a working probe into Mars orbit, something so far only accomplished by the United States, Russia and the European Union.It's a significant challenge,[url=http://www.hotyoupro.com]The north face jackets outlet[/url], as more than half of all Mars mission by a number of countries have so far failed.NASA is also planning a November launch of a Mars mission -- MAVEN -- to study the Martian atmosphere.U.S. space scientists said they were hoping for success for their Indian colleagues."To have India executing a successful orbiter mission would be great for space science," Mark Bullock of the Southwest Research Institute in Boulder, Colorado, said.
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