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ISRO to launch rockets to study Friday’s solar eclipse | The Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) will launch a series of rockets from its two launch centres between Thursday and Sunday to study Friday’s solar eclipse and its after-effects. A rare and longest annular solar eclipse of this
millennium will occur on Friday visible in the southern part of the country. ISRO’s
Thiruvananthapuram based the Vikram Sarabhai Space Centre (VSSC) a series of
Rohini
Sounding Rockets from Thumba Equatorial Rocket Launching Station (TERLS), to
investigate
the effects of the solar eclipse on the atmosphere. According to ISRO, four sounding
rockets of series RH 200 and RH300MK II with peak altitudes of about
70kilometres
and 116 kilometres respectively will be launched on Thursday to collect data.
This will be followed by another five launches on Friday, the eclipse day. Two
larger Rohini rockets of the series RH 560 MK II will also be launched from the
Satish Dhawan Space Centre (SDSC), Sriharikota, one each on Thursday and
Friday,
which will have a peak altitude of 548 kilometres. ‘The experiments will coordinate
modern ground-based eclipse observations with in situ space measurements.
Interpretation
of eclipse data together with space data will give new insights to the earlier
eclipse observations,” ISRO said in a statement. “With so many
atmospheric-ionospheric
parameters being analysed, this is going to be one of the most comprehensive
campaigns,
ever attempted, during a solar eclipse anywhere in the world,” the statement added.
The nine-metre RH 560 rockets weigh 1.5 tonnes and carry a 100-kilograms
payload
of instruments each. The two-stage rocket will take the instruments 500 kilometres
above the earth’s surface. The rockets fired from TERLS are smaller than RH 560.
They will reach 75 to 120 kilometres above the earth. |
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