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How India won the race to the moon’s south pole

The control room in the southern Indian city of Bengaluru erupted into cheers when the Chandrayaan-3 lander touched down Wednesday, a successful conclusion to India’s second attempt at a soft landing on the moon.

Its predecessor crashed due to a technical glitch during the final leg of the journey, but Indian scientists incorporated lessons from past mistakes into the new design. The successful landing makes India one of few nations to land on the moon, and the only one to land near the south pole, where large ice deposits may prove critical for future manned missions.

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Landing the Chandrayaan-3 spacecraft near the moon’s strategically important south pole is a major milestone for India’s evolving space program, demonstrating what can be achieved with modest resources.

Rajeswari Pillai Rajagopalan at the Observer Research Foundation says the mission highlights “the sophistication of India’s space capability despite the fact that India operates on a very tiny, small budget.”

Chandrayaan-3 cost roughly $75 million, a fraction of the cost of other lunar missions, making it a testament to what can be achieved with enough ingenuity and perseverance, say observers. And it’s just the beginning. The Indian Space Research Organization has solar and Venus missions in the works, and India is also planning to send an astronaut to space. 

Prime Minister Narendra Modi described the Chandrayaan-3 landing as “a victory cry for a new India.”

The scientists were glued to their screens, as were millions of others tuning in at home. All watched anxiously as the spacecraft’s four silver feet touched down.

“India is on the moon,” declared Sreedhara Somanath, the chief of the Indian Space Research Organization, as the control room in the southern Indian city of Bengaluru erupted in cheers.

It was a moment the whole nation had been waiting for. By becoming one of the few countries to land on the moon – and the first to do so near its south pole – India has proved its capacity for technological innovation and cemented itself as a space power.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

Landing the Chandrayaan-3 spacecraft near the moon’s strategically important south pole is a major milestone for India’s evolving space program, demonstrating what can be achieved with modest resources.

“This moment is an invocation of India’s rising destiny,” Prime Minister Narendra Modi said moments after the landing. “This moment is a victory cry for a new India.”

The United States, China, and the former Soviet Union have landed on the moon before, but not near this critical area for future manned missions. Russia almost beat India to the moon’s south pole, but its Luna 25 spacecraft crashed on August 20.

The landing is not only a triumph for India’s scrappy space program, but also, observers note, a testament to what can be achieved with enough ingenuity and perseverance. India’s quest for the moon reflects the government’s shifting vision for its role in outer space and has captured the public imagination. 

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