Social Sciences, asked by thanks87, 11 months ago

let me something about chandrayan 2​

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Answered by arnabroy52
1

Answer:

Chandrayaan 2's first image of the moon features iconic lunar landmarks, captured 2,650 km from the surface

India's second moon exploration mission Chandrayaan 2 has beamed back the first images taken from the moon's orbit, the Indian Space Research Organisation announced in a tweet Thursday. The image was captured by Chandrayaan 2 at an altitude of 2650 kilometres from the moon's surface on 21 August. Two of the most visible features in the frame are the Mare Orientale basin and the Apollo craters.

The image was captured by the LI-4 camera on Chandrayaan 2 at 7.03 pm IST, as per ISRO's website. "Take a look at the first Moon image captured by #Chandrayaan2 #VikramLander taken at a height of about 2650 km from Lunar surface on August 21, 2019," ISRO's tweet read.

Answered by gurwinderbatth4
0
India's second moon exploration mission Chandrayaan 2 has beamed back the first images taken from the moon's orbit, the Indian Space Research Organisation announced in a tweet Thursday. The image was captured by Chandrayaan 2 at an altitude of 2650 kilometres from the moon's surface on 21 August. Two of the most visible features in the frame are the Mare Orientale basin and the Apollo craters.

The image was captured by the LI-4 camera on Chandrayaan 2 at 7.03 pm IST, as per ISRO's website. "Take a look at the first Moon image captured by #Chandrayaan2 #VikramLander taken at a height of about 2650 km from Lunar surface on August 21, 2019," ISRO's tweet read.

Take a look at the first Moon image captured by #Chandrayaan2 #VikramLander taken at a height of about 2650 km from Lunar surface on August 21, 2019.

Mare Orientale basin and Apollo craters are identified in the picture.#ISRO pic.twitter.com/ZEoLnSlATQ

— ISRO (@isro) August 22, 2019

Chandrayaan 2s first image of the moon features iconic lunar landmarks, captured 2,650 km from the surface
First photo of the moon from Chandrayaan 2 shows the Mare Orientale basin in the top right-of-centre, and the Apollo crater in the centre-right of the image. Image: ISRO

Chandrayaan 2 successfully
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