After playing an integral part in the Mars Orbiter Mission or Mangalyaan in 2013, women scientists at the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) are all set to play a crucial role in space mission, Chandrayaan 2.
Breaking all gender stereotypes, Project Director M Vanitha and Mission Director Ritu Karidhal will be steering the country’s second mission to the moon on 22 July 2019, at 2.43 pm from the Satish Dhawan Space Center, Sriharikota, Andhra Pradesh. It is scheduled to land on the moon’s surface on 7 September, 2019.
In a June 12 press conference, ISRO Chairman K Sivan, said close to 30 per cent of the team working for Chandrayaan 2 are women.
Vanitha, an Electronic Systems Engineer, has headed the telemetry and telecommand divisions in the digital systems group at the Satellite Centre (now the UR Rao Space Centre) and also served as Deputy Project Director for data systems for Cartosat-1, Oceansat-2 and Megha-Tropiques remote-sensing satellites.
For her immense contribution, she received the Best Woman Scientist Award in 2006 from the Astronomical Society of India, News18 reported.
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As for Karidhal, fondly known as the ‘Rocket Woman of India’, she grew up in a middle-class family in Lucknow. In a TED Talk, she spoke about how, as a kid, she was fascinated by space and wanted to do something different. While growing up, she would collect news articles related to space activities by ISRO or NASA and read them regularly.
She did her M.Sc in Physics from Lucknow University and then went to pursue M.Tech from Indian Institute of Science in Bengaluru. Her dream finally came true in 1997 after she joined the space agency.
Karidhal is an Aerospace Engineer who served as the Deputy Operations Director during Mars Orbiter Mission. She is also a recipient of ISRO Young Scientist Award conferred by President APJ Abdul Kalam in 2007.
The mission is said to be the most challenging till date as it will attempt to explore the, as yet, unexplored region of the lunar south pole region. The mission aims to gather information on minerals, rock formations and water on the moon.
The lunar south pole is said to be of utmost importance to the scientific community as there is a possibility of the presence of water in permanently shadowed areas around it. Also, Lunar south pole region has craters that are cold traps and contain fossil records of the early Solar System.
The entire project cost nearly Rs 1,000 crore and comprises a lander, rover and satellite built under ISRO’s supervision.
Vanitha and Karidhal, both in their forties, have been working with the ISRO for nearly two decades now and are set to script a historic achievement.
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(Edited by Saiqua Sultan)