After successful landing of Chandrayaan-3 India today launched a rocket with the mission of studying the sun.

India’s first space mission to the sun aims to study the solar winds, which can affect Earth and are often observed through atmospheric phenomena.

The launch of Aditya-L1 (the name of the sun in Hindu) took place at approximately 9:20 Greek time.

India’s space mission to study the sun follows India’s mission to the moon late last month, as India became the first country to land a spacecraft on the moon’s south pole, achieving the goal faster than its counterparts in space. Russia’s ambitions.

Despite the fact that Russia had a more powerful launch vehicle, India’s Chandrayaan-3 outperformed Luna-25 in making the moon landing.

The mission has the potential to make “a big bang from a scientific point of view,” said Somak Raychaundry, who is involved in the development of some of the components of India’s space probe, adding that energetic particles ejected from the sun are likely to hit satellites that control communications and have been launched from the earth.

“Incidents have been recorded in which important communications have been disrupted as a satellite has been affected by the solar corona. Low Earth orbit satellites are at the center of the investment interest of large private companies worldwide, while this fact makes the Aditya L1 space mission a very important program,” he explained.