Indian moon mission to carry 2 NASA payloads   (AP)  Updated: 2006-05-09 16:35  An Indian unmanned mission to 
the moon will carry two NASA scientific devices designed to find minerals and 
ice on the lunar surface, a U.S. official said Tuesday. 
The deal between NASA and the Indian Space Research Organization or ISRO is 
seen as another sign of the increasingly close ties between New Delhi and 
Washington after decades of Cold War estrangement. 
 The mission, called Chandrayaan-1, is set to launch in 2007 or 2008, 
according to the ISRO Web site, and will map the lunar surface using an array of 
sensors. 
 The collaboration, initially agreed on during U.S. President George W. Bush's 
visit to India in March, calls for two NASA payloads to be carried to the moon 
by a 525-kilogram (1,160-pound) spacecraft. 
 One of the American devices, a mini-synthetic aperture radar, will map ice 
deposits in the moon's polar regions. The other instrument, called a moon 
mineralogy mapper, will asses mineral resources, said U.S. Embassy spokesman 
David Kennedy. 
 Chandrayaan-1 will also carry three scientific instruments from European 
research centers. 
 NASA Administrator Michael Griffin and ISRO Chairman G. Madhavan Nair signed 
the deal Tuesday in the southern Indian city of Bangalore. 
 Ties between New Delhi and Washington hit a low point when the United States 
and other Western nations imposed economic sanctions on India after it tested 
nuclear weapons in 1998. 
 The sanctions delayed ISRO's plans to develop its own engine for launching 
space vehicles. 
 However, most sanctions have since been lifted, and a civilian nuclear 
cooperation deal signed in March by Bush and India's Prime Minister Manmohan 
Singh is seen as the cornerstone of the emerging strategic partnership between 
the world's dominant power and one of Asia's economic powerhouses. 
 India began its space program in 1972, and has previously used engines from 
longtime ally Russia to launch satellites.   
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