India Successfully Lands Chandrayaan-3 Spacecraft on Moon, Joining Elite Group of Four Nations

India Successfully Lands Chandrayaan-3 Spacecraft on Moon, Joining Elite Group of Four Nations

The lunar surface as​ seen by the camera on​ board the Chandrayaan-3 on Aug.‍ 6, 2023.
Indian Space Research Organization

India landed its ‌Chandrayaan-3 spacecraft near the moon’s south pole, an area seen as critical for ​any sustained lunar operations because of ⁣possible water ice deposits there, becoming only the fourth nation to do so.

The spacecraft touched ⁤down⁤ on the dark side of the moon around 8:34 ‍a.m. ‍ET Wednesday, and the lander radioed back to Earth:‍ “India, I reached my destination and ‌you too!”

The Indian Space⁣ Research Organization, ISRO, tweeted out that message‍ as the country erupted in celebrations.

The Vikram lander carries a rover, Pragyan, which is expected to roll out ⁤once the dust⁢ from the landing clears. Once it⁤ is operational, the solar-powered rover will send images and‌ data from the surface of the moon for 14 days, the equivalent of a lunar day.

On Tuesday, ISRO released images of⁤ the ⁤moon captured by‍ the lander ‍as it approached for touchdown.

The Indian mission was launched last month. Russia’s ‌Luna 25, launched after the Indian mission and taking a faster trajectory to⁢ the ‍moon, crashed onto the lunar surface Saturday.

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi watched⁤ the landing online from South Africa, where he is attending a summit of ‌BRICS leaders. “This moment is precious and unprecedented. This moment ‍announces the victory of new India. This moment ⁣is the ⁤strength of 1.4 billion heartbeats,” he told the nation.

Previously, only the United States, the erstwhile Soviet ⁢Union and China have achieved landings on the⁣ moon.

An earlier Indian​ moon mission, the Chandrayaan-2, was only ⁣a ‍partial success as its lander ​suffered a software glitch and crashed into the moon.



2023-08-25 15:24:02
Article ‌from www.ibtimes.com

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