Though one could not see it very clearly, the Polar Satellite Launch
Vehicle (PSLV) taking off with the Mars orbiter was pretty audible. The
roar could be heard for a few seconds, and in just around a minute, the
great ball of fire over the trees surrounding the media centre at Satish
Dhawan Space Centre at Sriharikota turned into a tail of smoke and
disappeared into the horizon.
This is just the beginning of India's Mars Orbiter Mission and we
would now get valuable scientific information from space. It may or may
not be ground-breaking information, but that is what exploration is all
about—you win some and you lose some. I, for one, would be following the
journey of the Mars orbiter through space. It's like our personal Star
Trek episode.
Space exploration in itself is exciting. The space seems never-ending
and discoveries are just waiting to be made. Maybe our Mangalyaan would
find or stumble upon something. Just because the US has already gone to
space does not mean that it has been fully charted.
Unfortunately, most people in the country seem to have lost their
scientific temper. ISRO has been getting a lot of flak for this Rs 450
crore mission. The same people who spend crores of rupees on
entertainment—Shahrukh Khan-starrer Chennai Express earned more than
Rs150 crore in the first week of release—seem averse to spending
anything on science. More people would rather watch a cricket match than
the launch of the Mars orbiter.
Journalists attending the press meeting after the launch once again
asked the oft-repeated questions—should India be spending money on the
mission when it has other priorities, malnutrition, for instance; and is
the mission just to defeat China in the race in space? Chairperson of ISRO K Radhakrishnan justified the mission by talking about the possible applications that could emerge.
Tangible benefits of space missions
Self reliance in the satellite sector is important to everyone. We
use it in weather forecasting. It was important in predicting Phailin in
time to prevent loss of lives (one must remember nearly 10,000 people
had died in the super cyclone that struck Odisha in 1999), we use it in
agriculture, and the list can go on. None of this would have been
possible if we did not have space missions. Incidentally, USA's NASA was
wrong in its predictions about Phailin.
NASA's mandate is to look for life on Mars. Compared to this, India's
mandate to prove its technological capability of getting the orbiter
close to Mars seems pretty lame. ISRO should have explained its mandate
better. If journalists are still asking questions 20 months after the
mission was conceived, the common person must be totally clueless.
People would have celebrated the feat more if they understood how it
would help them. Effective outreach is not rocket science.