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Chandrayaan-2: India's historic moonshot appears to end in failure – BBC News, BBC News

Chandrayaan-2: India's historic moonshot appears to end in failure – BBC News, BBC News


        

                                 Chandrayaan-2 taking offImage copyright                 Isro                                                      
Image caption                                    The mission’s lift-off was broadcast live to an audience of hundreds of millions                             

India’s attempt to become the first nation to land a spacecraft near the Moon’s unexplored south pole

The Chandrayaan-2 approached the Moon as normal until an error occurred about 2.1km (1.3 miles) )

India’s Space Research Organization (Isro) said it lost contact seconds before the ship was expected to ***.

India would have been the fourth nation to make a soft landing on the Moon.

The countryfirst Moon mission– Chandrayaan-1, in 2008 – carried out the first and most detailed search for water on the lunar surface using radars.

What happened?

Chandrayaan-2 entered the Moon’s orbit on 20 August and was due to make a controlled descent to the surface early on Saturday, Indian time, over a month after it first took off.

Staff at mission control were glued to the screens at Isro’s Bangalore space center as the spacecraft made its descent towards the surface.

The control room burst into applause during the so-called rough breaking phase of the descent, with India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi watching the action from behind a glass screen.

Details were unclear in the minutes after the apparent failure.

            

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Media captionChandrayaan-2 was launched on 22 July

Isro chairman Kailasavadivoo Sivan announced to staff that the ship’s initial descent had been “normal , “and that the mission’s data would be analized.

Mr Sivan had earlier described the final 15 – minute descent period as “15 minutes of terror “.

After the announcement, Prime Minister Modi gave a brief speech in the control room. “It is no small thing we have achieved,” said Mr Modi. “Be courageous.”

What was this mission all about?

Chandrayaan-2 (Moon vehicle 2) was themost complex mission ever attempted by India’s space agency, Isro. “It is the beginning of a historical journey,” Isro chief K Sivan said after launch in July.

The lander (named Vikram, after the founder of Isro) carried within its belly a 27 kg Moon rover with instruments to analyze the lunar soil.

In its 14 – day life, the rover (called Pragyan – wisdom in Sanskrit) could travel up to a half a kilometer from the lander and will send data and images back to Earth for analysis.

The mission would have focused on the lunar surface, searching for water and minerals and measuring moonquakes, among other things.

Why would it have been significant ?

A soft landing on another planetary body – a feat achieved by just three other countries so far – would have been a huge technological achievement for Isro and India’s space ambitions, writes science writer Pallava Bagla.

He adds that it would also have paved the way for future Indian missions to land on Mars, and opened up the possibility of India sending astronauts into space.

For the first time in India’s space history, the interplanetary expedition was led by two women – Muthaya Vanitha, the project director, and Ritu Karidhal, the mission director.

            

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Media captionIs India a space superpower?

It’s also a matter of national pride – the satellite’s lift-off in July was broadcast live on TV and Isro’s official social media accounts.

The mission has also made global headlines because it’s so cheap – the budget for Avengers: Endgame, for instance, was more than double at an estimated $ 356 m. But this isn’t the first time Isro has been hailed for its thrift. Its 2014 Mars mission cost $ 74 m, a tenth of the budget for the American Maven orbiter.

                                                                                                                      

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