India’s first moon mission to take off on October 22

India’s first to take off on October 22

By Matthias Williams,

NEW DELHI –– India will launch a locally built rocket for the country’s first unmanned m

to the moon on Oct. 22, the head of the project said on Tuesday. “If at all there is any delay, it will be because of the weather, otherwise I don’t foresee any technical difficulties,” M. Annadurai told .

The launch, earlier scheduled for April but delayed due to technical difficulties, has been given a window between Oct 20 and Oct 28 for takeoff from a town.

Six countries, including the United States, are directly involved in the project, which will cost an estimated 3.86 billion rupees (US$80.8 million).

It aims to map a three-dimensional through high-resolution remote sensing and map the surface’s chemical and .

Despite limited funding, India operates an extensive consisting of , satellites and data-processing centers.

India plans to send an astronaut into space by 2014 and a to moon by 2020. As part of preparations for that, it launched four satellites on a single rocket for the first time in January 2007, including one that was brought back to earth.

India’s was launched as a scientific , but has now begun to make money from . At least 16 currently orbit the earth, supporting telecommunications, , earth observation, weather forecasting, and healthcare.

India’s constellation of seven earth-observation satellites is the largest of its kind in the world, but its lags behind its Asian , which in 2003 became only the third nation after the United States and the to launch a man into space aboard its own rocket.

China celebrated the completion of the country’s first spacewalk last month, hailed as a major victory by its leaders.

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