22nd July, 2019
India on Monday launched a low-cost rocket, Chandrayaan-2 — or Moon Chariot 2 on a historic bid to put a landing craft on the surface of the Moon and join an elite space force.
The rocket cost India just $140 million. The United States — which is marking the 50th anniversary of Neil Armstrong becoming the first human on the Moon — spent the equivalent of more than $100 billion on its Apollo missions.
A week after an initial launch was halted just before blast-off, the rocket took off from the Satish Dhawan Space Centre carrying national pride and the hopes of Indian scientists.
India is seeking to become just the fourth nation after Russia, the United States and China to land a spacecraft on the Moon. If the rest of the mission goes to plan, the Indian probe will land on the lunar South Pole in early September.
“Every Indian is immensely proud today!,” tweeted Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who has vowed to send a manned mission into orbit by 2022.
“Special moments that will be etched in the annals of our glorious history!”
There were applause, handshakes and hugs in the mission control room as the rocket blasted off from the base on an island just off the coast of Andra Pradesh state.
President Ram Nath Kovind watched the launch alongside 7,000 dignitaries and flag-waving children, with the crowd bursting into cheers at the spectacle.
“Today is a historic day for space, science and tech in India,” Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) chief K. Sivan said as he hailed the efforts made to fix a fuel leak that forced the earlier launch to be postponed.
India was also hailed by its international counterparts. The US state department said on Twitter that the launch was “an incredible achievement!” while the European Space Agency sent congratulations.
Chandrayaan-2 was launched on India’s most powerful rocket, the Geosynchronous Satellite Launch Vehicle (GSLV) MkIII. It carried an orbiter, a lander and a rover almost entirely designed and made in India.
The lander — named after Vikram A. Sarabhai, the father of India’s space programme — will carry the rover to near the lunar South Pole.
ISRO scientists will remotely control the rover named Pragyaan — “wisdom” in Sanskrit — as it carries out experiments. It will work for one lunar day, the equivalent of 14 Earth days, studying rocks and soil on the Moon’s surface.
The 2.4-tonne (5,300-pound) orbiter is expected to circle the Moon for about a year, taking images of the surface, looking for signs of water, and studying the atmosphere.