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Look Out MAVEN, India's Mars Orbiter Is Closing In

An artist's rendering of the U.S. MAVEN spacecraft in orbit around Mars.
NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center
An artist's rendering of the U.S. MAVEN spacecraft in orbit around Mars.

Look Out MAVEN, India's Mars Orbiter Is Closing In

Anticipation is building in India over its rendezvous with Mars.

NASA erupted into cheers after confirmation Sunday night that its space probe MAVEN injected into the Martian orbit. That was just a couple days ahead of a critical engine burn designed to place the Indian spacecraft around the Red Planet.

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Sleepless scientists conferring at the Space Center in Bangalore passed a crucial dry run Monday: a four-second fire up of an engine on the Mars Orbiter that's been dormant in space for some 300 days. The moment of truth comes when Dr. A.S. Kiran Kumar, director of the Space Application Center, says they flip the switch for a much longer duration.

"Now it has to fire," Kumar says. "So that is the tricky part."

Trickier still, he says the orbiter must re-orient its trajectory to place itself into the Martian orbit.

Kumar says the engine will reverse thrust like a plane after landing and slow the spacecraft to 2.5 miles per second. Plan B is for scientists at the Indian Space Research Organization in Bangalore, India's version of NASA, to fire eight small thrusters to elbow the probe into place. Failing that, they risk shooting the probe past Mars and moving into the outer reaches of the solar system.

The carefully calculated maneuver is slated for Wednesday, when Kiran Kumar says the craft is nearest to Mars.

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"That is when we are firing these engines to reduce its velocity," he says. "And with that reduced velocity Mars' gravitational influence will be sufficient to bring the satellite into an elliptical orbit [around Mars]."

Adding to the suspense, at that moment Mars will cast a shadow over the spacecraft; blocking communication with ground control.

An enormous 100-foot diameter satellite dish at India's Deep Space Network has received and transmitted messages to the orbiter as it hurtled along a 400-million mile arc to Mars. NASA put some of its own at India's disposal to track the health of the Mars Orbiter.

The space probe, the size of small car, will conduct no exotic experiments. Dr. K. Radhakrishnan, chairman of the Indian Space Research Organization, says the mission is more of a test to see if India can take a satellite all the way to Mars and circle the planet.

"I would say 85 percent of the success is assigned to realization of this objective," Radhakrishnan says. He says with that ambition, India's space program is about to do what only the space agencies of Russia, the U.S. and Europe have done.

"We are taking a new direction," he says. "This is the first interplanetary probe [for] India."

India journeyed to Mars for approximately $70 million. That's less than it cost to make the $100 million space thriller Gravity.

"And there are many Indians, many Indian intellectuals and activists who would say 'Why are spending so much money? Seventy million dollars is too much,'" says Roddam Narasimha, a professor of engineering mechanics at the Jawaharlal Nehru Center for Advanced Scientific Research.

Narasimha, who is the former director of the National Aerospace Laboratory, says amortized over the life of the Mars program it costs each of India's 1.2 billion people about two cents a year, "or the cost of a cup of roadside tea once every three years," he says. "That is my argument with the Indians who say this is waste of money," he says.

Still, critics ask how India can venture to Mars when back on Earth more than a quarter of a billion Indians live on $1.25 a day, a poverty figure the World Bank cites. Writer and columnist Aakar Patel says it is wasteful symbolism, "That you get to thump your chest on the global stage ... There is no other point to it."

But Narasimha says India, which spends a total of $1 billion on its entire space program, can afford to explore deep space thanks to the improvisation of its scientists. Indians compressed their effort to build the Mars Orbiter into just 18 months. Narasimha says this phenomenon, known as "Jugaad," plays out from India's slums to its scientific labs.

"Frugal innovation," he says. "It means you want to get the most out of the money you put in and you have to be very clever about it. You think about it, you fix it, you make it work, and get something out of it. And that goes on all the time."

India has become a low-cost alternative for launching satellites. The Indian Space Research Organization sent five foreign satellites into orbit in May, indicating its potential to capture some of world's $300 billion annual space business.

But aerospace engineer Narasimha says India does not "fantasize" about competing with economically advanced countries; its gaze is more inward. He quotes the founders of India's space agency who said: "It's necessary to develop competence in advanced technologies, and to deploy them for the solution of our own particular problems, to leapfrog from a state of backwardness and poverty.

"That was the key," Narasimha says.

India has a constellation of satellites that its space scientists insist advances the day to day existence of the common man. India's weather satellites now save tens of thousands of lives. Others remotely sense water resources, study the oceans and improve communications.

India's Space Program director Radhakrishan says satellites have become "part and parcel" of the life of every Indian.

"And we say here: 'it touches his life,'" he says.

India's orbiter around Mars will study the presence of methane in the atmosphere looking for clues to former life on the Red Planet.

A successful mission would make India the first Asian nation to reach Mars, and scientists hope it will whet the appetite of a next generation to explore space.

You can follow NPR's Julie McCarthy on Twitter at @JulieMcCarthyJM

Copyright 2014 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.