ISRO Releases Chandrayaan-3 Lunar Data

Update: 2024-08-23 14:50 GMT
President Droupadi Murmu with Minister of State for Space Jitendra Singh and ISRO chief S Somanath during the first National Space Day function, in New Delhi, Friday. (PTI Photo)

New Delhi: The Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) on Friday threw open scientific data gathered from the Chandrayaan-3 mission for researchers across the world for analyses, to mark the first anniversary of India landing a spacecraft on the Moon.

The space agency has granted access to over 55 gigabytes of data from the five payloads – three on the Vikram lander and two on the Pragyan rover – that created history on August 23 last year by making a soft landing near the unexplored south pole region of the Moon.

"This data is not going to be confined with those scientists who have created those instruments, but it will be made available to all the researchers of the country and the world for furthering the outcome of this," Isro chairman S. Somanath said at the first National Space Day celebrations here, held to mark the landing on the Moon.

The Chandrayaan-3 data sets are available on Policy-based data Retieval, Analytics, Dissemination and Notification System (Pradan) portal of the Indian Space Science Data Centre at pradan.issdc.gov.in. The Pragyan rover conducted in-situ chemical analyses of the lunar surface, contributing to a better understanding of the Moon's origin and evolution. This information is crucial for future lunar exploration and potential resource utilisation.

Scientists from Ahmedabad's Physical Research Laboratory (PRL) after studying the data from Chandrayaan-3 provided evidence to confirm the lunar magma ocean hypothesis, that the Moon evolved from a giant ocean of magma which later cooled down.

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