“Touching the Moon: The Triumph of Chandrayaan 3 Successful Lunar Landing”4 min read

Chandrayaan 3

Chandrayaan 3:

The newest incarnation of India’s ambitious lunar mission, Chandrayaan 3, has safely arrived on the lunar surface, achieving history after the previous attempt failed in 2019.

The landing, which occurred at the planned time of 5:34am PT (6:04pm IST) on Wednesday, has made India the fourth nation in the world to make a soft landing on the moon, following the former Soviet Union, the United States, and China, and the first country to land on the lunar south pole, which stays an unexplored area that is expected to aid in the understanding of the moon’s atmosphere and pave the way for future space exploration programs.

Earlier this month, Russia sought to dethrone India by launching Luna-25, that was scheduled to land softly on the south pole before India’s Chandrayaan 3. However, after losing contact with Roscosmos, Russia’s space agency, the spacecraft slammed into the moon on Saturday.

The Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO) launched the Chandrayaan 3 spacecraft on July 14 using its “Launch Vehicle Mark-III” vehicle. The launch took place from the Satish Dhawan Space Centre on the island of Srihari Kota in southern India.

Chandrayaan 3, India’s third Chandrayaan mission (“moon vehicle” in Sanskrit), seeks to show secure landing and roaming on the moon’s surface as well as perform on-site scientific investigations. The spacecraft, built on a budget of less than $75 million, consists of a propulsion module, lander, and rover, all of which contain seven scientific instruments.

To address the issues that plagued its predecessor, the lander of the Chandrayaan 3 missions features upgraded sensors, software, and propulsion systems. ISRO also conducted a lot of simulations and extra testing to confirm the lander’s ruggedness for a successful landing.

Seismic vibrations, near-surface plasma, lunar temperature, thermal conductivity, elemental composition, and Earth’s spectrum fingerprints will all be investigated by the lander.

The United States is preparing to launch Artemis III, a manned mission to the lunar south pole, as early as 2025. The data gained from India’s Chandrayaan 3 mission will aid in understanding the surface prior to the human arrival.

Unlike the lander, the Chandrayaan 3 rover is identical to the Chandrayaan-2. The lander and rover will have a mission life of one lunar day, which is equivalent to 14 days on Earth.

Chandrayaan 3 arrives 14 years after India’s first moon landing mission, which discovered water molecules in the lunar atmosphere in 2008.

Although the Chandrayaan-2 lander-rover collapsed after touchdown, the orbiter is still in orbit and studying the moon. The Chandrayaan-2 orbiter assisted in pinpointing the landing site for the Chandrayaan 3 lander and is going to keep relaying signals to Earth to keep in touch with the lander.

India has shown significant dedication in space exploration in recent years. The South Asian nation has made great progress in producing technologies such as launch vehicles, satellites, and hyperspectral earth imagery with the assistance of over a hundred space tech businesses. New Delhi has enacted a space strategy to encourage collaboration between commercial companies and government agencies.

ISRO is additionally developing a list of projects in addition to Chandrayaan 3. These involve the long-planned Gagan Yaan human space flight project and the Aditya L1 solar observatory project to investigate the sun.

In June, India agreed on the Artemis Accords with NASA to collaborate on space exploration with other member nations. NASA also plans to educate Indian astronauts at the Johnson Space Center in Houston before sending them to the International Space Station next year. Furthermore, ISRO and NASA are collaborating to deploy a low-Earth observatory (LEO) in 2024 that will image the entire planet in 12 days and provide consistent data for assessing changes in Earth’s ecosystems, ice mass, vegetation biomass, sea level, and emergencies and dangers.

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Written by: Anshika Patra

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