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Swarajya Staff
Sep 07, 2019, 01:05 AM | Updated 01:05 AM IST
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The Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) is less than an hour away from creating history as Chandrayaan 2’s Vikram lander is expected to touchdown on the lunar surface just before 2 AM on Saturday (7 September).
ISRO has officially pegged the touchdown in the vicinity of the lunar South Pole at 1.52.54 AM and its live broadcast will start from 1.15 AM.
Less than 3 hours to go !
— ISRO (@isro) September 6, 2019
Watch the live telecast from 1:15 AM IST on our website https://t.co/H6xiSf2TIP and on DD National.
Live streaming also available on:
Youtube: https://t.co/xzjitfLyHz, Facebook: https://t.co/zugXQAGoNq pic.twitter.com/8wQ1LL6nYA
ISRO scientists along with around 200 journalists and various science enthusiasts are present in its Bengaluru monitoring centre tracking every detail of the Vikram lander.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi has also reached the monitoring centre to be part of the historic moment. He is accompanied by 60 science students from across the country who were selected based on a science quiz.
PM Modi arrives in Bengaluru â will be at @ISROâs ISTRAC centre from 1AM, about 53 minutes before scheduled touchdown of the Vikram lander on the lunar surface. #Chandryaan2 pic.twitter.com/QpkW74ABcp
— Shiv Aroor (@ShivAroor) September 6, 2019
The Chandrayaan 2 landing has become a global phenomenon with astrophysicists like Neil deGrasse Tyson and billionaire Jeff Bezos rooting for a successful landing.
Prasar Bharti Director General Supriya Sahu shared live footage from ISRO’s mission headquarters where the scientists can be seen glued to their system monitors as they prepare for the final landing.
Donât sleep tonight, keep awake India as History is being made. Reporting from ground Zero at #ISRO. The Mission Operation Complex here is buzzing with excitement. Scientists are glued to their systems and analysing all kinds of complex data #Chandrayaan2Live #Chandrayan2 pic.twitter.com/w6hLYclxDU
— Supriya Sahu IAS (@supriyasahuias) September 6, 2019
Sometime after 1.15 am on 7 September, the lander will start the nearly 15-minute-long process of landing on the lunar surface. It will chiefly go through six phases before touching down.
This process is completely autonomous and is the most critical phase of the Chandrayaan 2 mission, with the scientists exercising litter to no control during this process - thus aptly dubbed as the “15 minutes of terror”.