Beyond Politics

Indian Space Rover, Lander Have Yet to Awaken After Enduring Cold Lunar Night

The Chandrayaan-3 mission was India’s first successful moon landing and the world’s first near the lunar south pole. India was the fourth nation to soft-land on (that is, not crash into) the moon, following the Soviet Union, United States and China.
Sputnik
The Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO) has not received any communications from the Vikram lander or Pragyan rover it landed on the moon as part of its Chandrayaan-3 mission, after the two robotic space explorers turned off for the two-week-long lunar night.
The lunar night is over for the part of the moon where Vikram and Pragyan were last seen, and as such is expected to have turned back on and send a message to the ISRO; however, that has not yet happened.
The main mission of the Chandrayaan-3 explorers was to operate during the lunar day and then enter “sleep mode” in preparation for the lunar night. While they were both designed to turn back on once the sun hit their solar panels again, that was never guaranteed and would be considered a bonus for the ISRO. Still, officials expected the two devices would turn on at least one more time after their initial lunar night.

On Friday, the ISRO tweeted “no signals have been received from [the Vikram or Pragyan]” but noted that “efforts to establish contact will continue.”

That tweet, posted 13 hours ago at the time of this writing, has not been followed by an update.
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The ISRO launched the Chandrayaan-3 in July and landed the Vikram on August 23, which then sent out the Pragyan rover. Two weeks later, they shut off to prepare for the night and hoped they would turn back on around this time.
The ISRO said they hoped they would turn back on, but cautioned the harsh environment would make that difficult.
While there has been no word from Vikram or Pragyan yet, it is still possible they may wake up as the sun’s rays warm the devices up. “This sustained period of cold may have caused issues with the equipment, and it may take longer to warm up than was previously planned, especially if the rover is in the shadow of a boulder,” Sarah Casewell of the University of Leicester, UK, told a science-focused outlet.
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