Aditya L1- Mission / Rehearsal of Aditya L-1 completed, what will India get by circling the sun? Learn

Zoom News : Sep 01, 2023, 08:22 AM
Aditya L1- Mission: After the successful mission of Chandrayaan-3, ISRO is ready for its new mission. After the moon, now it is the turn of the sun, on Saturday i.e. September 2, ISRO will launch the Aditya L-1 satellite. Its work will be to revolve around the Sun, with its help ISRO is trying to study the Sun and present the secrets related to it to the world. ISRO has completed all the preparations related to the launch, what is the latest update regarding this, know how this mission will work…

ISRO has informed that Aditya L-1 will be launched from Sriharikota on September 2 at 11:50 am. Rehearsals for this have been completed and all the things are in place, that is, now we are just waiting for the time of launching. There is a place between the Sun and the Earth which is called L-1 point, this is the most important place to keep an eye on the Sun. ISRO is installing its Aditya L-1 here itself, it is about 1.5 million km from the Earth. is far.

Aditya L-1 Mission

Aditya L-1 is India's first mission, which is being conducted solely for the study of the Sun. This mission with a budget of about Rs 400 crore will be launched with PSLV-C57 rocket. This mission will carry a total of 7 payloads with it, out of which 4 will study the Sun and the remaining 3 will study the L-1 region.

What will be available from Aditya L-1?

Just as there is a race to study the moon, there is a similar race to study the sun. Aditya L-1 will be active for about 5 years while revolving around the Sun, through this mission we will get information about the storms coming on the Sun, the Sun's outer ray corona and other activities.

ISRO will get information from this mission not only about the future activities on the Sun but also about what has already happened here. Because a lot of work is done on Earth by the Sun, its study is also important. India's Aditya L-1 will carry out various payloads including taking pictures, measuring temperature and other tasks.

Before India, America, Japan, Europe and China have also studied the sun. That means India will not be the first country to do this, although this is definitely India's first step in this direction. Because recently ISRO's Chandrayaan-3 has created history, in such a situation, the eyes of the whole world are now focused on this mission as well.

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