-backed initiative with more than two dozen other countries to govern joint missions and civilian space exploration.
Vikram, Chandrayaan-3's lander, has been trending on X, formerly known as Twitter, as billionaire industrialists and Bollywood actors eagerly awaited the historic moment. Schools urged students across the world's most-populous nation to watch the live event and commemorate the landmark mission, while some prayed in mosques and temples for a successful landing.
Shares of 13 Indian space-sector companies, including PTC Industries Ltd., Zen Technologies Ltd. and Centum Electronics Ltd., rallied and added more than $2.5 billion in market value this week, according to data complied by Bloomberg.
The water ice present in the moon's unchartered south pole has also piqued the interest of space voyaging countries, including the U.S. and China. It could be a crucial drinking, breathing and rocket fuel resource to advance human space exploration deeper into the solar system.
The U.S. space agency's mission, Artemis III, plans to send the first humans to explore the area near the south pole in 2025. China is also seeking to build a research station near the region and place astronauts on the moon by 2030. Japan has an uncrewed mission planned for launch on Aug. 26.
India has other space efforts slated. The country will soon launch a mission, called Aditya L1, for a detailed solar study. A Venus mission is also on the Indian Space Research Organisation's agenda, Modi said after the landing. The agency plans to demonstrate human spaceflight capability through its Gaganyaan mission, which will launch crew members into an orbit of 400 kilometers (249 miles) for three days before bringing them back safely to Earth.
India's space agency and NASA have agreed to send an Indian astronaut to the International Space Station. The South Asian nation is also in discussions with Japan to work on a moon mission together.
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