The lander has separated from the Chandrayaan-3 spacecraft as the country targets an ambitious lunar landing on August 23
The lander module of India’s lunar mission successfully separated from the propulsion module of the Chandrayaan-3 spacecraft on Thursday, the Indian space agency has announced.
The Vikram lander, named after Dr Vikram A Sarabhai, considered the father of the Indian space program, will now continue its solo journey to the Moon, while the propulsion module will remain in lunar orbit for months or even years.
The separation of the lander module marks a milestone in India’s third lunar mission. On Wednesday, the spacecraft carried out the final lunar-bound orbit reduction maneuver, ahead of Chandrayaan-3 attempting a Moon landing on August 23, according to the Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO). The forthcoming phases of the mission involve activating and validating the onboard instruments, including three pivotal scientific payloads, while the lander will engage in two successive orbit-reduction maneuvers.
“Lander Module Successfully separates from Propulsion Module today (August 17, 2023). The next Lander Module (Deorbit 1) maneuver is scheduled for tomorrow (August 18, 2023) around 1600 hrs IST,” the ISRO said in a tweet.
Former ISRO scientist Mylswamy Annadurai told the ANI news agency that when the mission lands on the Moon it “will definitely be the day for India to rejoice.”
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A soft landing for Chandrayaan-3 on the lunar surface will position India among a select group of nations such as Russia, the US, and China, to have successfully accomplished the feat. Russia also currently has its own Moon mission in space, Luna-25, which is expected to land on the lunar south pole by August 21.