Indian youths study NASA's images and find Chandrayaan's record lander!


Instead of organizations like ISRO and NASA, ordinary citizens have made significant breakthroughs in space exploration!

Washington / Chennai, Ta. December 3, 2019, Tuesday

Lander record of Chandrayaan-2 that was broken on the surface of the Moon has finally been found. Lander's site was discovered by Indian engineer Shanshuga Subramaniam, studying photos of Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO), an active spacecraft on the moon of NASA. Lander record of Chandrayaan-2 was to make a soft landing on the moon.

During that process, Vikram fell on the moon on September 6th. Its soft landing was unsuccessful. When the record was broken, it was 2.1 km above the moon's flank. From then till date, photographs of spacecraft that were active around the moon were studied to find the debris of the record.

NASA's LRO orbiting the Moon right now on the moon. Pictures of the surface of the moon are constantly taken by his camera. These photographs were studied by an astronomical young man from Chennai.

Meanwhile, he was suspected of having a record debris in an image. The businessman worked for engineer and multinational company as a hobby. In the meantime, the pictures that appeared to be suspicious were placed on the Twitter handle of NASA-ISRO and asked if this image appears in the record?

Study of before-after pictures

Of the lunar surface images taken by the LRO, taken on September 17, NASA released September 26. Many such photographs are available for astronomers on their own website. The picture was in the area where the record was broken. But the pictures taken above did not seem to have the smallest broken record. That's why NASA invited people to compare this space by declaring earlier and earlier plots of land and land collapse. LRO is NASA's robotic spacecraft and has orbited the Moon since 2009.

NASA's Positive Answer

Tsugaga looked at the pictures and tagged the NASA-ISRO on October 3rd and asked if the record appears. He then studied NASA and re-tagged the images on November 17, asking NASA. NASA responded positively. After NASA verified the images in their own way, it was now announced that the debris found was a record. However, Shishuga worked five to seven hours a day to find this out. In addition, Tshumuga had only a laptop in the name of the device, in which he studied the pictures. NASA e-mailed the convention to congratulate them.

ISRO's thick response

Shishuga also reported to Esro each time on his Twitter account and in other ways. But Esau did not give a specific answer. Even after NASA confirmed, there was no tweet on Esro's Twitter account. It is being proven once more that ISRO scientists working hard for science research are too weak to maintain public contact.

After 87 days the leaves began to fade

When Chandrayaan-2's record lander collapsed, there was disappointment across the country. Scientists in Esro were also upset. If Vikram could land, India would have been the fourth country to land a soft landing on the moon. Following this failure, ISRO tried to find Lander's crash landing site in various ways. There was no success. But now, after 87 days, the spot has been found.

Science interests will develop among ordinary citizens

For any country, selling science interests to ordinary citizens is an important achievement. The climate for science development in India is very low. Under these circumstances a common citizen has aroused people's science interest through this exploration. It will also inspire young people interested in science. Many space research institutes, including NASA and ISRO, and other space scientists have tried hard to find the debris. But mostly everyone was looking for the wrong place. Where the debris was supposed to be broken, there was no debris, but it fell 750 meters away.

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