| The Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) has reached an agreement on what payload it will include from the European Space Agency (ESA) in ISRO's Chandrayaan-I lunar space mission. |
| ISRO had signed an agreement for including the instruments onboard India's first scientific mission to the moon, it said in a statement here on the opening day of an international conference on space law, on Monday. |
| This agreement, under an umbrella agreement for co-operation already existing between ISRO and ESA, was signed on Monday by G Madhavan Nair, ISRO's chairman, and Jean Jacques Dordain, director general of ESA, ISRO said. |
| Chandrayaan-I is planned for launch by the year 2007-08 on board an Indian Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle. The 525 kg satellite will be placed in a 100 km polar orbit around the moon and it will have a life of two years. |
| An important component that will go on the spacecraft, from the Indian side, is an impact probe for proving technologies required for future landing missions. |
| Indian and ESA scientists will share the data from the European instruments as per the agreement signed on Monday. |
| The European contribution will include a low energy (0.5-10 keV) X-ray spectrometer called Chandrayaan Imaging X-Ray Spectrometer from the Rutherford Appleton Laboratory, UK. |
| It will measure the abundance of various elements, carbon for instance, distributed over the lunar surface using X-ray fluorescence technique. It will also include an X-ray solar monitor to record the incident solar X-ray flux. |
| There will be a near infra-red (IR) spectrometer from the Max Planck Institute of Aeronomie, Germany, to detect and measure lunar mineral abundances. Also on board will be a sub keV (kilo electron volt "" a measure of energy) atom reflecting analyser from the Swedish Institute of Space Physics, developed in collaboration with India. |
| This will measure volatiles generated due to solar wind impacting lunar surface and determine the surface magnetic field anomalies. Europe will also contribute to India's High Energy X-ray Spectrometer. |
| Indian experiments that will go on the Chandrayaan-I spacecraft include a terrain mapping camera, with stereo imaging capability, a hyper-spectral imager, a lunar laser ranging instrument with a vertical resolution of better than 5m, and a high energy X-ray (10-250 keV) spectrometer with a footprint of 20 km to detect radio nuclei. |


