Muscat Daily

NASA locates debris from India Moon lander

-

New Delhi, India - NASA said on Tuesday that it has found the debris from India’s Moon lander, which crashed on the lunar surface in September.

The US space agency released a photo showing the site of the lander’s impact and the debris field, crediting an Indian engineer for helping locate the site.

The engineer, Shanmuga Subramania­n, said he examined an earlier NASA photo to locate the debris.

The space agency said in a statement that Subramania­n first located the debris about 750m northwest of the main crash site.

“It took days of work to find the crash site,” Subramania­n said. “I searched around the north of the landing spot and found a small little dot. When I compared it to the Lunar Reconnaiss­ance Orbiter images of the site from the last nine years, I located the debris and reached out to NASA.”

The 33 year old engineer announced his discovery on Twitter on October 3, after which NASA performed additional searches in the area and made an official announceme­nt. The space agency said that after receiving Subramania­n’s findings, its team ‘confirmed the identifica­tion by comparing before and after images’. NASA also said, “Despite the loss, getting that close to the surface was an amazing achievemen­t.”

India’s space agency lost touch with the Vikram lunar lander after it crash landed during 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 land a vessel on the lunar surface, and only the third to operate a robotic rover there.

 ?? (AFP) ?? This image released by NASA shows the Vikram lander impact point
(AFP) This image released by NASA shows the Vikram lander impact point

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Oman