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India loses contact with spacecraft on mission to the moon

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India lost contact with a spacecraft it was attempting to land on the moon on Saturday, the chairman of the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) said, in a setback to the nation’s ambitious plans to become the first country to probe the unexplored lunar south pole.

The lander of India’s Chandrayaan-2 moon mission was attempting a “soft,” or controlled, landing near the south pole of the moon where scientists believe there could be water ice. ISRO lost communication with it just as it was about to land on the moon.

“Data is being analysed,” ISRO Chairman K Sivan told a room full of distraught scientists at the agency’s tracking centre in Bengaluru.

The Indian designed spacecraft, which had been orbiting the moon, began descending toward the lunar surface at about 2007 GMT but scientists lost contact with it during the penultimate stage of the descent.

“Vikram lander descent was as planned and normal performance was observed up to an altitude of 2.1 km. Subsequently, communication from Lander to the ground stations was lost,” an ISRO official said. The lander was named Vikram after the father of India’s space program, Vikram Sarabhai.

A live broadcast from ISRO, India’s equivalent of NASA, showed scientists grow tense and the floor falls silent as the control station struggled to get a signal from the lander.

“There are ups and downs in life…What you have accomplished is no small achievement,” Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who was present at the ISRO center, told scientists after being briefed by Sivan.

Though ISRO had not released any official update, Modi in a subsequent formal address to the scientists and the nation hinted that the lander might have travelled at a higher-than-expected speed and crash-landed on the moon.

“If historians someday write about today’s incident, they will certainly say that inspired by our romantic description of the moon throughout life, Chandrayaan, in the last leg of the journey, rushed to embrace the moon,” he said.

Modi said that though India “came very close” it needs to “cover more ground” in the times to come. “I can proudly say that the effort was worth it and so was the journey.”

In an emotional moment broadcast on TV channels, Modi embraced and consoled a visibly heart-broken Sivan.

“We are full of confidence that when it comes to our space program, the best is yet to come,” Modi said.

Sivan had earlier described the final moments of the landing mission as “15 minutes of terror,” due to the complexities involved with lunar gravity, terrain and dust.

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