Chandrayaan-3

Introduction

Chandrayaan-3 is India’s third lunar mission and the country’s second attempt at a soft landing on the Moon. It was designed mainly to demonstrate safe and soft landing, rover mobility on the lunar surface, and in-situ scientific experiments. The mission was launched by ISRO on 14 July 2023 and achieved a successful soft landing on 23 August 2023 near the Moon’s south polar region, making India the first country to soft-land near this region and the fourth country overall to achieve a soft landing on the Moon.

Purpose of the mission

The mission objectives of Chandrayaan-3 were: 

• To demonstrate safe and soft landing on the lunar surface
• To demonstrate rover roving on the Moon
• To conduct in-situ scientific experiments on the lunar surface
These were the three official mission objectives stated by ISRO.

Why Chandrayaan-3 was needed

Chandrayaan-3 was conceived after the Chandrayaan-2 landing attempt in 2019 did not achieve a soft landing. Chandrayaan-3 was therefore designed as a follow-up mission focused especially on landing reliability, hazard detection, velocity control, and surface operations. It did not carry an orbiter like Chandrayaan-2, but instead used a propulsion module to carry the lander module to lunar orbit.

Components of Chandrayaan-3

The Chandrayaan-3 mission consisted of: 

• Propulsion Module
• Lander Module named Vikram
• Rover named Pragyan
The propulsion module carried the lander module from Earth parking orbit to lunar orbit, after which the Vikram lander separated and descended to the lunar surface. The Pragyan rover then rolled out from the lander for surface exploration.

Launch details

Chandrayaan-3 was launched on 14 July 2023 from the Satish Dhawan Space Centre, Sriharikota, using the LVM3 launch vehicle. The mission followed Earth-bound orbit raising manoeuvres, trans-lunar injection, lunar orbit insertion, orbit reduction, lander separation, and final powered descent before landing.

Landing achievement

The Vikram lander successfully soft-landed on 23 August 2023. This achievement made India: • The first country to land near the lunar south polar region
• The fourth country to soft-land on the Moon after the Soviet Union, the United States, and China
This was one of the most significant milestones in India’s space programme.

Landing site

The landing took place near the lunar south polar region. This region is scientifically important because it contains permanently shadowed craters and areas where water ice may exist or survive for long durations. The south polar terrain is also regarded as strategically important for future lunar exploration missions.

Why the lunar south pole is important

The lunar south pole is important because: 

• It has permanently shadowed regions where water ice may be present
• It contains unique thermal and illumination conditions
• It is important for understanding lunar geology and volatile distribution
• It may support future robotic and human missions
This is why Chandrayaan-3’s landing region had both scientific and long-term exploration value.

Major technological features

To improve mission success, Chandrayaan-3 included several technological improvements in the lander system. ISRO states that these included advanced technologies related to safe landing, hazard detection and avoidance, velocity correction, propulsion handling, and landing-leg robustness. These improvements were meant to increase mission resilience compared to Chandrayaan-2.

Payloads on the lander

The Vikram lander carried three major scientific payloads:

• ChaSTE – Chandra’s Surface Thermophysical Experiment
• ILSA – Instrument for Lunar Seismic Activity
• RAMBHA-LP – Radio Anatomy of Moon Bound Hypersensitive Ionosphere and Atmosphere – Langmuir Probe
It also carried a Laser Retroreflector Array provided by NASA for passive laser ranging studies.

Payloads on the rover

The Pragyan rover carried two scientific payloads: 

• LIBS – Laser Induced Breakdown Spectroscope
• APXS – Alpha Particle X-ray Spectrometer
These instruments were designed to study the elemental composition of the lunar surface near the landing site.

Payload on the propulsion module

The propulsion module carried one important payload called SHAPE, which stands for Spectro-polarimetry of Habitable Planet Earth. Its objective was to study Earth from lunar orbit in spectral and polarimetric bands, mainly to help in future studies of habitable exoplanets by using Earth as a reference.

Scientific findings

Chandrayaan-3 produced important in-situ findings from the lunar surface. ISRO reported that: 

• LIBS confirmed the presence of sulphur on the lunar surface through direct in-situ measurement
• APXS detected elements such as aluminium, sulphur, calcium, iron, chromium, titanium, manganese, silicon, and oxygen-related signatures in the soil and rocks
• ChaSTE made the first in-situ observations of the temperature profile of the lunar topsoil near the south polar region
These results added significantly to India’s lunar science output.

Surface temperature observations

One of the notable scientific outcomes of the mission was the ChaSTE payload’s observation of temperature variation in the lunar surface and subsurface near the landing site. This was important because the south polar region had not been studied in this way through direct in-situ measurement before by India.

The Pragyan rover’s instruments established the presence of sulphur and several other elements in the lunar regolith around the landing site. 

Mission life

The nominal mission life of the Vikram lander and Pragyan rover on the lunar surface was about one lunar day, which is around 14 Earth days. The propulsion module had a longer expected operational duration of around 3 to 6 months. After completion of the main surface mission, ISRO later reported additional experimental activities such as a hop test by Vikram before the onset of lunar night, though the prime mission remained the soft landing and science demonstration.

Significance for India

Chandrayaan-3 is significant because it demonstrated: 

• India’s soft-landing capability on the Moon
• Indigenous deep-space mission design and execution capability
• Progress in lunar science and surface robotics
• India’s rise as a major spacefaring nation
Official government documents describe the mission as a landmark achievement in India’s space journey and as an important step toward technological self-reliance in space.

The mission was globally significant because it expanded scientific access to the lunar south polar region, which is a major focus area for future international lunar exploration. The success of Chandrayaan-3 strengthened India’s place in global space diplomacy and lunar science, especially at a time when many countries are planning future robotic and human missions to the Moon.

Possible concerns and limitations

Although Chandrayaan-3 was a major success, its surface mission duration was limited by the lunar day-night cycle because the lander and rover were solar-powered and the lunar night was extremely harsh. Also, the mission was not meant to be a sample-return mission or a long-duration polar station, so its scope was focused and demonstrative rather than expansive.

Conclusion

Chandrayaan-3 was a landmark lunar mission that combined technological demonstration with scientific exploration. Its successful soft landing near the lunar south pole placed India in an elite group of spacefaring nations and made it the first country to land near this region. The mission is important not only as a space achievement but also as a symbol of India’s scientific capability, strategic ambition, and growing role in future lunar exploration.

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