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Do you know about NASA - CHIPS Mission. I bet you dont...

CHIPS (Cosmic Hot Interstellar Plasma Spectrometer) is an American (NASA) astrophysics spacecraft that was launched by a Delta 2 rocket from Vandenberg AFB at 00:45 UT on 13 January 2003. The 60 kg, triaxially-stabilized spacecraft has a spectrograph covering the 9-26 nm wavelength band at a resolution of 0.1 nm, scanning the entire sky in chunks of 5 degree x 27 degree segments during each orbit. The targets are the hot and diffuse nebulae at about a million degrees temperature. The band covers several strong emission lines. Launch Date:   2003-01 13     Launch Vehicle:  Delta II Launch Site:   Vandenberg AFB, United States Mass:   60 kg  CHIPS carried out an all-sky survey of the diffuse background at wavelengths from  90  to 260 Å at a spectral resolution between about λ / 150 and λ / 40, and a spatial resolution of 5 to 15 degrees. CHIPS detected diffuse emission near 170 Å, but this turned out to be associated with the earth’s thin outer atmosphere or its int

Leaving EARTH NASA Human MARS Mission 2030 Step towards Infinite Universe

With advancement in Space Technology, we are stepping up our foot towards the Infinite Space. The first step of which is to Send humans on our neighbouring planets i.e, MARS. And to make it a reality,
NASA is on a journey to Mars, with a goal of sending humans to the Red Planet in the 2030s. That journey has already begun.




Ever since 20th century, NASA and its partners have sent orbiters, landers and rovers , dramatically increasing our knowledge about the Red Planet and paving the way for future human explorers. Pathfinder, Curiosity, Maven, Many survey satellite and landers and all of these machines have worked to give us a correct picture of our neighbours. The Curiosity rover has gathered radiation data to help us protect future astronauts, and the upcoming Mars 2020 rover will study the availability of Martian resources, including oxygen.

STEPS FOR REACHING MARS : EARTH RELIANT, PROVING GROUND & EARTH INDEPENDENT.

EARTH RELIANT : Earth Reliant exploration is the first step related with doing research aboard the International Space Station . The orbiting microgravity laboratory serves as a world-class test bed for the technologies and communications systems needed for human missions to deep space. Astronauts are learning about what it takes to live and work in space for long periods of time, increasing our  understanding of how the body changes in space and how to protect an astronauts health.




PROVING GROUND : In the next step, we move into the Proving Ground, conducting a series of missions near the moon  -- which we call as "cislunar space" -- that will test the capabilities we will need to live and work at Mars. Astronauts on the space station are only hours away from Earth, but the proving ground is days away, a natural stepping stone to a Mars mission, which will be months away from home.
The first of these missions will launch NASA's powerful new rocket, the Space Launch System , from NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida. The mission will carry the Orion spacecraft (without astronauts) thousands of miles beyond the moon during an approximately three week mission . Next up, astronauts will climb into Orion for a similar mission, traveling farther than humans have ever traveled before.
Also in the 2020s, we'll send astronauts on a yearlong mission into this deep space proving ground, verifying habitation and testing our readiness for Mars.
Another proving ground milestone is the Asteroid Redirect Mission . NASA will send a robotic spacecraft to capture an asteroid boulder and put it in a safe orbit around the moon. Astronauts on Orion will then explore the asteroid, returning to Earth with samples. This two-part mission will test both deep space spacewalking and sampling techniques and Solar Electric Propulsion, which we’ll need to send cargo as part of human missions
missions to Mars.

Image Credit : The Verge


EARTH INDEPENDENT : 
Finally, we Will become Earth Independent, building on what we've learned on the space station and in deep space to send humans to low-Mars orbit in the early 2030s.
This phase will also test the entry, descent and landing techniques needed to get to the Martian surface and study what's needed for in-situ resource utilization or "living off the land." NASA is already studying potential "Exploration Zones" on Mars that would offer compelling science research and provide resources our astronauts can use.


Image Credit : NASA.
Note : Every information published is for knowledge purpose only. All the information credit goes to NASA.