homehome Home chatchat Notifications


The US and India sign Space Agreement

We were telling you a while ago how India launched a probe towards Mars, and how it was successful in reaching the Red Planet’s orbit – a magnificent achievement for any country, let alone India, which is still a developing country. To make their success even more remarkable, they are the first country ever to […]

Dragos Mitrica
October 1, 2014 @ 12:43 pm

share Share

We were telling you a while ago how India launched a probe towards Mars, and how it was successful in reaching the Red Planet’s orbit – a magnificent achievement for any country, let alone India, which is still a developing country. To make their success even more remarkable, they are the first country ever to successfully send a probe to Mars from their first attempt.

India’s Mars Orbiter Mission got straight down to work on arriving at the Red Planet.

The US was also apparently impressed, as they offered to sign a contract of collaboration with India, planning a joint radar spacecraft to study our home world in 2020, but leaving the door open for other collaborations as well. The agreement was signed by agencies’ two leaders at the 65th International Astronautical Congress in Toronto.

India‘s space agency (Isro) was established in 1969, the same year in which Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin were walking on the Moon. Mars Orbiter Mission (MOM), also known as Mangalyaan, arrived in orbit at Mars on 24 September to image the planet and study its atmosphere. The mission is a “technology demonstrator” project to develop the technologies for design, planning, management, and operations of an interplanetary mission. The mission’s main objectives are ambitious and include exploring Mars’ surface features, morphology, mineralogy and Martian atmosphere using indigenous scientific instruments. However, the main objective is simply creating a Mars orbiter capable of performing Earth-like maneuvers in the Martian orbit.

The joint Nasa-Isro Synthetic Aperture Radar mission (NISAR) will detail land change on Earth.

share Share

Dinosaur Teeth Help Scientists Recreate the Air Dinosaurs Once Breathed

Dinosaurs inhaled air with four times more CO2 than today.

Coastal Flooding Is Much Worse Than Official Records Show — and No One’s Measuring It

There were big flaws in how we estimated floods in coastal communities.

Did Columbus Bring Syphilis to Europe? Ancient DNA Suggests So

A new study pinpoints the origin of the STD to South America.

Huge Centuries-Old Human Figures Carved in Sandstone Are Suddenly Visible Again on Hawaii Beach

Beneath the shifting sands of an Oahu beach, ancient carvings — hidden for years — have suddenly reemerged.

A Popular Artificial Sweetener Could Be Making Cancer Treatments Less Effective

Sucralose may weaken immunotherapy by altering gut microbes and starving immune cells

AI Designs Computer Chips We Can't Understand — But They Work Really Well

Can we trust systems we don’t fully understand?

Strength Training Unlocks Anti-Aging Molecules in Your Muscles

Here’s how resistance training can trigger your body’s built-in anti-aging switch.

"Self-termination is most likely." This expert believes our civilization is on a crash course led by narcissistic leaders

Our civilization may be facing a “single gargantuan crash,” but collapse isn’t destiny. It’s a choice.

New DNA Evidence Reveals What Actually Killed Napoleon’s Grand Army in 1812

Napoleon's army was the largest Europe had ever seen, but in just a few months it was obliterated.

Breathing This Common Air Pollution May Raise Your Dementia Risk by 17 Percent

Long-term exposure to common air pollutants like soot and traffic fumes may significantly raise your risk of dementia.