HomeNewsScienceHere comes the Sun: All you need to know about ISRO's Aditya-L1 which successfully performed second Earth-bound manoeuvre

Here comes the Sun: All you need to know about ISRO's Aditya-L1 which successfully performed second Earth-bound manoeuvre

ISRO launched the Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle, which will study the Sun, from Sriharikota on September 2 in one of its longest flights into a highly eccentric orbit around Earth. On September 5, it successfully underwent a second Earth-bound manoeuvre.

September 06, 2023 / 16:58 IST
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The new orbit attained, after Aditya L1's second Earth-bound manoeuvre on September 5, is 282 km x 40,225 km, according to ISRO.
The new orbit attained, after Aditya L1's second Earth-bound manoeuvre on September 5, is 282 km x 40,225 km, according to ISRO.

The Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) launched Aditya-L1, India's first solar observatory mission on September 2. And it has successfully undergone a second Earth-bound manoeuvre on September 5, performed from ISTRAC (ISRO Telemetry, Tracking and Command Network), Bengaluru. The new orbit attained is 282 km x 40,225 km, according to news reports. With three more manoeuvres in line, the next, EBN#3, is scheduled for September 10, 2023, around 02.30 am IST, the ISRO has said.

The organisation estimates that the Aditya-L1 mission will arrive at the observing site in four months. A halo orbit will be set up around Lagrangian Point 1 (L1), which is 1.5 million km from Earth and points directly at the Sun.

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What is Aditya-L1?

Aditya-L1 is a spacecraft designed explicitly for solar research. It has seven different payloads, all of which were created in-house. There were seven launches, five by ISRO and two by Indian universities working with ISRO.
Aditya means "Sun" in Sanskrit. The Lagrange Point 1 of the Sun-Earth system is referred to here. L1 is the point in space where the Sun's and Earth's gravitational pulls are equal, as the general public understands. As a result, whatever you put there will have a relatively steady orbit around both planets.