ISRO's Chandrayaan-3 mission releases images of the moon taken from 70 km altitude 
Technology

ISRO releases images of moon captured from 70 km altitude by Lander camera

ISRO on Tuesday released images of the Moon captured by the Lander Position Detection Camera (LPDC) of the Chandrayaan-3 mission from an altitude of about 70 km on August 19.

Bengaluru | ISRO on Tuesday released images of the Moon captured by the Lander Position Detection Camera (LPDC) of the Chandrayaan-3 mission from an altitude of about 70 km on August 19.

LPDC images assist the Lander Module (LM) of the mission, scheduled to make a soft-landing on the Lunar surface on Wednesday, in determining its position (latitude and longitude) by matching them against an onboard moon reference map, the Bengaluru-headquartered national space agency said.

The ISRO on Monday released images of the Lunar far side area captured by the Lander Hazard Detection and Avoidance Camera (LHDAC).

This camera that assists in locating a safe landing area -- without boulders or deep trenches -- during the descent is developed by Ahmedabad-based Space Applications Centre (SAC), a major research and development centre of ISRO.

According to ISRO, to achieve the mission objectives of Chandrayaan-3, several advanced technologies are present in the Lander such as LHDAC.

Chandrayaan-3, launched on July 14, is a follow-on mission to Chandrayaan-2 to demonstrate end-to-end capability in safe landing and roving on the lunar surface.

Govt mulling sending Central team to Kerala over fresh Nipah cases

Widespread protests in Kerala seeking Minister Veena George's resignation

Keep phones switched off from 9 pm to 9:30 pm to support Palestine: CPI(M)

At least 27 people dead in Texas floods as search continues for many missing

India's first national cooperative university to end nepotism in sector, training vacuum: Shah