LOL ... my badNo no.i am talking about other Indian forum , i stopped visiting that enemy platform

LOL ... my badNo no.i am talking about other Indian forum , i stopped visiting that enemy platform
The altitude shown is about 500m and the down range is 1.09Kms
Another probable theoryHere we can see Vikram descent to 335 meters. The big question is at what speed it was descending?
View attachment 9923
Another probable theory
Pre Determined destination was probably a crater whose depth is 335 m from ground level but due to deviation in the landing position the lander crashed on on ground level???@gautam
Lol f*ck all this
Give ISRO another 50 million dollars and get them to build a modified lander / rover only and have them sent it by 1 years time . No need of orbiter since the current one is functional and will support the same.
The built time will also be considerably reduced due to obvious reasons.
A PSLV should be able to launch it.
gravity of lunar is 1.6m/s^2 ...which means far less than ours....if descending speed was as per requirement i wouldn't consider it as crash land....lets say we lost connection with vikram...then he should come down slowly ( weak gravitational force) which mean touch down impact shouldn't be strong and equipment should be just fine.....may be it rolled down side ways.....
if this crazy theory is correct , then we can re-establish connection.
who knows i may be wrong....what do u say
the trace shows communication off. This OFF appeared when it was at 2.1km altitude and 1.09km down range from touch down point.
View attachment 9922
Although this is not shown in live feed but that comm should have been saying ON just before impact.
@Ashwin provided video that i also suspected earlier. Lander was upside down during decent and altimeter readings could have been erroneous. Lander had too little room to recover.
I was talking of side thrusters which were supposed to be on the four sides of the lander and not the bottom four thrusters which were there to help the main engine.The image of the lander shown on the Vikram Descent trajectory screen, is not upside down. it appears to be an animation showing the Vikram lander reorienting its position for the eventual vertical landing.
If you observe the sharp deviation shown on the trajectory screen in the fine break phase, lander is not coming down as you would expect in a powered descent, rather it appears to be a straight free fall. During the final phase of the fine break operation, the four side thrusters were expected to shut and one the central thruster would be firing. I think the side thrusters either shut off prematurely or the central thruster did not fire.