India locates lander that went missing during moon landing
'It must have been a hard landing,' Indian space agency head says
The lander module from India's moon mission was located on the lunar surface on Sunday, one day after it lost contact with mission control, and efforts are underway to try to establish contact with it, the head of the nation's space agency said.
The Press Trust of India news agency cited Indian Space and Research Organization (ISRO) chairman K. Sivan as saying cameras from the moon mission's orbiter had located the lander.
"It must have been a hard landing," PTI quoted Sivan as saying.
Now Another Big News 🎉<br><br>Vikram has been Spotted in one-piece, come on <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/ISRO?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#ISRO</a> <br><br>Entire country is Waiting for this.<a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/ISROSpotsVikram?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#ISROSpotsVikram</a><br><br> <a href="https://t.co/O5aswwXE1d">pic.twitter.com/O5aswwXE1d</a>
—@shivraj_Office
ISRO officials could not be reached for comment.
The space agency said it lost touch with the Vikram lunar lander on Saturday as it made its final approach to the moon's south pole to deploy a rover to search for signs of water.
A successful landing would have made India just the fourth country to get a vessel to the lunar surface and only the third to operate a robotic rover there.
The space agency said Saturday the lander's descent was normal until two kilometres from the lunar surface.
The roughly $184-million Cdn ($140 million US) mission, known as Chandrayaan-2, was intended to study permanently shadowed moon craters thought to contain water deposits that were confirmed by the Chandrayaan-1 mission in 2008.
The latest mission lifted off on July 22 from the Satish Dhawan space centre in Sriharikota, an island off the coast of the southern Indian state of Andhra Pradesh.
After its launch, Chandrayaan-2 spent several weeks making its way toward the moon, ultimately entering lunar orbit on Aug. 20.
The Vikram lander separated from the mission's orbiter on Sept. 2, and began a series of braking manoeuvres to lower its orbit and ready itself for landing.
Only the United States, the former Soviet Union and China have landed a spacecraft on the moon.