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India aims to become 4th nation to land on moon
by Clyde Hughes
Washington DC (SPX) Jul 13, 2019

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India will try to become just the fourth country to make a soft landing on the moon, after its Chandrayaan 2 mission takes off Monday.

India's space agency is making final preparations over the next three days before liftoff from an island in the Bay of Bengal, officials said.

The spacecraft will take two months to get to the moon, first going into orbit 60 miles above the lunar surface before deploying the Vikram lander in September. Once the Vikram lands, it will release a six-wheel rover to study the environment.

"Chandrayaan 2 is an Indian lunar mission that will boldly go where no country has ever gone before - the moon's south polar region," the Indian Space Research Organization said.

"The aim is to improve our understanding of the Moon - discoveries that will benefit India and humanity as a whole."

Prime Minister Narendra Modi has hailed India's space program, which has been around since the 1960s, as a point of national pride and a symbol of its emerging international prominence.

India space officials conducted a launch rehearsal Friday. Final preparations will begin Saturday with engineers turning on orbiter and lander power. The countdown will start Sunday with liftoff scheduled for 2:51 a.m. Monday.

If the mission succeeds, India will join the United States, Russia and China as the only nations to have made soft landings on the moon. Israel attempted to put down a lander in April, but a technical glitch sent its craft crashing into the lunar surface.

Source: United Press International


Related Links
Indian Space Research Organization
Mars News and Information at MarsDaily.com
Lunar Dreams and more


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MOON DAILY
The Moon now has hundreds of artifacts. Should they be protected?
Washington (AFP) July 11, 2019
Three rovers, six US flags, dozens of probes that either landed successfully or crashed, tools, cameras and trash: the Moon is dotted with hundreds of objects as a result of space exploration. Some experts are calling to grant them heritage status to protect them from future tourists and human activity. It all started on September 13, 1959 when Soviet probe Luna 2 smashed into Mare Imbrium, its 390 kilograms (859 pounds) of mass vaporizing, no doubt, on impact. It was followed in succession ... read more

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