Friday, October 25, 2024

India Preparing Next Lunar Landers

You'll remember India's successful lunar lander Chandrayaan-3 from last summer through the fall. With that mission, India became the fourth nation in world history to soft land a probe on the moon and the first to land as close to the south pole as they did, essentially 70 degrees south latitude. At last week's International Astronautical Congress (IAC) convention in Milan, the ISRO (Indian Space Research Organization) announced India’s plans for the Chandrayaan-4 lunar sample return mission. This mission will target a landing between 85 and 90 degrees south latitude. They also talked about a follow-up joint lander and rover mission with Japan. 

The Chandrayaan-4 mission will consist of two stacks launched on two separate rockets and will target the vicinity of the lunar south pole, according to P. Veeramuthuvel of the Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO), speaking at the International Astronautical Congress (IAC) in Milan, Oct. 17. 

The mission will aim to collect around three kilograms of samples from near the south pole, around which water-ice is thought to be available. ISRO will require several new technologies, including the ability to scoop from the surface and drill to a depth of around two meters to sample the subsurface.

They haven't completely finalized the landing location, but it's an ambitious mission that will include lunar landing, sampling, docking in lunar orbit and returning to Earth safely with the samples. All of these are technologies and techniques that will be useful for India in their plans to put astronauts on the moon by 2040.  

The separate Chandrayaan-4 stacks will each have a mass of around 4.6 tons, making a total mass of 9.2 tons, each launching on an LVM-3 launch vehicle. The modules will dock in geosynchronous transfer orbit—using a circuitous route to the moon, as with Chandrayaan-3—and travel to the moon as one. An earlier mission design envisioned using one LVM-3 and PSLV launcher for the two launches.  

As the infomercials on TV used to say, "but wait! There's more!"

JAXA also released some information on  the Chandrayaan-5 mission, also called LUPEX, which is a joint mission between ISRO and The Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA). 

The landing mission will also target the lunar south pole, with coordinates of 89.45°S, 222.85°E, on an elevated ridge near Shackleton crater. There are permanently shadowed regions within the vicinity, potentially for the mission rover to explore. The rover will drive between 500 and 1,000 meters, taking in-situ measurements, including determining potential water-ice deposits.

India will provide the lander, mission planning and payloads, while Japan will contribute the launch vehicle, various payloads and the rover. Payloads will include ground penetrating radar, a range of spectrometers and water analysis instruments contributed by both sides.

Spacecraft renders for the Chandrayaan-4 and Chandrayaan-5/LUPEX moon missions. Credit: P. Veeramuthuvel/ISRO

It's interesting to see the determined efforts from ISRO. In addition to the Chandrayaan-4 mission, a Venus orbiter, their first crewed space station module, and a reusable launch vehicle also received approval last month.



2 comments:

  1. Common docking ring on the ISRO station module, I hope?

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    Replies
    1. Sure hope so. Is anyone not using a common docking ring these days?

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