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India eyes the Sun after successful moon landing

The launch of Aditya-L1, the first space-based Indian observatory to study the Sun, is scheduled for September 2, the Indian space agency said

India eyes the Sun after successful moon landing

Days after becoming the first nation to land a craft near the Moon's largely unexplored south pole, India's space agency said on Monday it will launch a satellite to survey the Sun.

"The launch of Aditya-L1, the first space-based Indian observatory to study the Sun, is scheduled for September 2," the Indian Space Research Organisation (Isro) said on X, formerly known as Twitter.


Aditya, meaning "sun" in Hindi, will be fired into a halo orbit in a region of space about 1.5 million kilometres (930,000 miles) from Earth, providing the craft with a continuous clear view of the Sun.

"This will provide a greater advantage of observing the solar activities and its effect on space weather in real time," Isro said.

The spacecraft will be carrying seven payloads to observe the Sun's outermost layers -- known as the photosphere and chromosphere -- including by using electromagnetic and particle field detectors.

Among several objectives, it will study the drivers for space weather, including to better understand the dynamics of solar wind.

While NASA and the European Space Agency (ESA) have previously placed orbiters to study the Sun, it will be the first such mission for India.

The unmanned Chandrayaan-3 -- "Mooncraft" in Sanskrit -- touched down on the lunar surface last week, making India only the fourth country behind the United States, Russia and China to land successfully on the Moon.

That marked the latest milestone in India's ambitious but cut-price space programme, sparking celebrations across the world's most populous country.

India has a comparatively low-budget space programme but one that has grown considerably in size and momentum since it first sent a probe to orbit the Moon in 2008.

Experts say India can keep costs low by copying and adapting existing technology, and thanks to an abundance of highly skilled engineers who earn a fraction of the wages of their foreign counterparts.

In 2014, India became the first Asian nation to put a craft into orbit around Mars and it is slated to launch a three-day crewed mission into the Earth's orbit by next year.

It also plans a joint mission with Japan to send another probe to the Moon by 2025 and an orbital mission to Venus within the next two years. (AFP)

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US senator hits out at India's visa temple and H-1B workers over 'ethnic favouritism'

Highlights

  • Senator Schmitt called H-1B and related visa programmes a "Visa Cartel".
  • He shared an image of Hyderabad's Chilkur Balaji Temple in his posts.
  • India accounts for 70 to 80 per cent of all H-1B approvals annually.
Republican senator Eric Schmitt of Missouri sparked a social media storm this week after posting a series of attacks on India's H-1B visa applicants on X.
Schmitt claimed that US visa programmes, including H-1B, L-1, F-1 and Optional Practical Training, have together created what he called a "Visa Cartel" that displaces American workers, suppresses wages and hollows out the American middle class.

Schmitt also alleged that foreign students, nearly half of whom he said are Indian nationals, receive taxpayer-subsidised work permits while corporations avoid payroll taxes and standard wage protections.

"They flow into H-1B, then green cards, while US grads with debt compete against cheaper labour," he added.

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