Bengaluru:India's Mars Orbiter spacecraft has completed seven years in its orbit, well beyond its designed mission life of six months.
"Indeed, a satisfying feeling," K Radhakrishnan who as the then Chairman of Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) led the Mars Orbiter Mission (Mangalyaan) team told the media on the milestone.
MOM is the maiden interplanetary mission of ISRO. Launched on November 5, 2013, the probe was successfully inserted into Martian orbit on September 24, 2014 in its first attempt.
MOM is primarily a technology demonstration venture and all the mission objectives were successfully met, according to officials of Bengaluru-headquartered India's national space agency.
The main lessons learnt were in the field of design and realisation of systems and subsystems, launch for the interplanetary mission, insertion into other planet's orbit, operation of the spacecraft and scientific instruments around Mars orbit, they said.
The lessons learnt have raised the confidence of ISRO scientists for taking up future interplanetary missions.
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ISRO has been continuously monitoring the spacecraft and its five scientific instruments, and officials said scientific analysis of the data being received from MOM spacecraft is in progress.
On the health of the spacecraft, M Annadurai, who was the Programme Director of MOM, said the spacecraft's "moving elements are facing some issues and some of the redundancies we have to switch over."
"The spacecraft's health is reasonably good considering that we are in the seventh year," Annadurai told media.