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The ISRO is set to launch Aditya-L1 from Sriharikota in Andhra Pradesh on September 2.
The IIA said the VELC was developed in close collaboration with the ISRO.
“IIA had to build India’s first large sized ‘Class to Clean Rooms’ at (sic) its CREST campus in Hosakote to assemble VELC,” IIA said in a statement.
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“Earlier, this mission was conceived as Aditya-1 with a 400 kg class satellite carrying one payload, the Visible Emission Line Coronagraph (VELC), and was planned to be launched in an 800 km low earth orbit,” the IIA said.
A satellite placed in the halo orbit around the first Lagrangian point (L1) of the Sun-Earth system has the major advantage of continuously viewing the Sun without any occultation/eclipses, the IIA said.
Therefore, the Aditya-1 mission has now been revised to “Aditya-L1 mission” and will be inserted in a halo orbit around the L1, which is 1.5 million km from the earth towards the Sun, it explained.
“The VELC payload on-board Aditya-L1 is an internally occulted solar coronagraph with simultaneous imaging, spectroscopy and spectro-polarimetry channels close to the solar limb. VELC is designed to image solar corona,” IIA said.
Both imaging and spectroscopic observations obtained by VELC payload are key to study the diagnostic parameters of solar corona and dynamics as well as origin of the coronal mass ejections and magnetic field measurements of the solar corona.
Stokes vector measurements in the plane-of-sky and imaging in white-light are the unique features of this payload, it added.
The scientific studies by the satellite will enhance the current understanding of the solar corona and also provide vital data for space weather studies, the IIA said.
India scripted a history when the Vikram lander of Chandrayaan-3 made a soft landing on the surface of the moon on August 23.
While the lunar exploration is underway, the Indian space agency decided to study the sun as well.