New Delhi, September 18: Expanding the Chandrayaan series, the Union Cabinet on Wednesday approved the fourth mission to the Moon and also gave a green signal for the building of the first unit of the Bharatiya Antariksh Station (BAS) by 2028. The Cabinet chaired by Prime Minister Narendra Modi approved Chandrayaan-4 to develop and demonstrate technologies to help astronauts return to Earth after successfully landing on the Moon.

The mission also aims to collect Moon samples, bring them back safely and analyse them on Earth. The “Chandrayaan-4 mission will achieve the foundational technologies capabilities eventually for an Indian landing on the Moon (planned by year 2040) and return safely back to Earth,” according to a Cabinet Communique. “Major technologies that are required for docking/undocking, landing, safe return to Earth and also accomplish lunar sample collection and analysis would be demonstrated,” it added. Chandrayaan-3 successfully demonstrated the safe and soft landing of Lander on the tricky lunar surface.  What Is Chandrayaan-4 Mission? Here’s All You Need To Know About India’s New Mission to the Moon.

Chandrayaan-4 Mission to Moon Gets Cabinet Approval

It established vital technologies and demonstrated capabilities that only a few other nations possess. The ability to collect lunar samples and return them safely back to Earth remains the next challenge. The Chandrayaan-4 mission is “planned for Rs 2,104.06 crore”, and the development of the spacecraft and its launch will be handled by ISRO. The Cabinet said the “cost includes spacecraft development and realisation, two launch vehicle missions of LVM3, external deep space network support and conducting special tests for design validation, finally leading to the mission of landing on the Moon’s surface and safe return to Earth along with the collected lunar sample.”

The mission is expected to be “completed within 36 months of approval”, the Cabinet said. Meanwhile, expanding the vision for the Indian space programme, the government had envisaged an Indian Space Station by 2035 and an Indian to land on the lunar surface by 2040. Towards this goal, the Cabinet on Wednesday approved the development of the first module of BAS-1. The Cabinet also revised the Gaganyaan Programme to include the scope of development and precursor missions for BAS, and factored an additional uncrewed mission. Venus Orbiter Mission Gets Cabinet’s Approval: After Moon and Mars, India Sights Science Goals on Venus, Key Details Here.

“With a net additional funding of Rs 11,170 crore in the already approved programme, the total funding for Gaganyaan Programme with the revised scope has been enhanced to Rs 20,193 crore,” the Cabinet said. “The target is to develop and demonstrate critical technologies for long duration human space missions,” it said. Under the programme eight missions are envisaged -- four under the ongoing Gaganyaan Programme by 2026, and development of BAS-1, and another four missions for demonstration and validation of various technologies by December 2028.

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