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MIP provided very good images: Nair

After successfully landing the Moon Impact Probe (MIP) on the lunar surface on Nov 14, ISRO has activated stereoscopic camera that has provided "very good images", ISRO chief said.

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BANGALORE: After successfully landing the Moon Impact Probe (MIP) on the lunar surface on Nov 14, ISRO has activated stereoscopic camera that has provided "very good images", ISRO Chief Madhavan Nair said Saturday.
 

"After the landing of MIP on Moon, we have activated stereoscopic camera which has given us very good images. The pictures are already on our website and give fine details of the surface, craters, mountain like structures, it is very valuable catch," he said on the sidelines of 'Bengaluru Space Expo' here.
      

"All other instruments on Chandrayaan-1 have also been energised. Two instruments, however, remain to be switched off. They are scheduled to activated by mid-December as they (instruments) require favourable conditions such as sun angle and so on," Nair said.

As MIP was descending, the video (stereoscopic) camera took 3,000 images within 25 minutes. "The closest image was just at the ridge of Shackleton crater and it has given a very vivid image of that. It shows that MIP has precisely landed," he said.

"The mass spectrometer has given a data which shows the types of elements present on the lunar surface. It (data) has to be calibrated," Nair said.
      

The altimeter, he said, is another instrument which is supposed to give trajectory. "The work (calibration) is going on and it will take three months. This has confirmed that
whatever we have done is on the dot," he added.

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