Sunday, December 22

Teamindus is on Right Path, Made Substantial Progress

Indian team has made “substantial progress” and was in the “right direction” said an international panel of judges from the Google Lunar XPRIZE during visit of the Teamindus office today.

TeamIndus is the only Indian team competing for the USD 30 million prize that requires privately funded teams to land their spacecraft on the surface of the moon, travel 500 metres and broadcast high definition video, images and data back to Earth.

“I think we have seen very substantial progress…They are heading in the right direction. However, I would say in space you always can expect the unexpected and this team has the ability to tackle the problems,” Chairman of the panel Professor Alan Wells told reporters here.

TeamIndus will launch its 600 kg spacecraft on board  ISROs Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle from the Satish Dhawan Space Centre at Sriharikota and it will inject the spacecraft into an orbit 800 km above the surface of the Earth.

The spacecraft will take 4 kg Japanese Hakutos rover on it to the moon along with its own indigenously designed and developed robotic rover.

teamindus team showing spacecraft design

 

The panel of expert judges consisting of eminent space  scientists and aerospace engineers drawn from some of the  finest institutions from around the world are on a five-day  review visit.

The exercise formed part of the overall review to gauge readiness of TeamIndus Moon Mission as it nears launch.

TeamIndus Fleet Commander Rahul Narayan said, “We see this engineering review as well as the support from the panel as validation that we are on the right path. We will now be integrating the learning from the review into fine-tuning the mission in the days ahead,” he said.

On the launch schedule, Narayan said they were hopeful of completing the mission in next three to six months.

Inside Teamindus

 

The deadline for the completion of mission fixed by the  Google Lunar XPRIZE is March 31 next year.

In response to a question on investments, Narayan said,  “The total cost of the programme is expected to be around Rs  450 crore, out which more than half has been collected and  spent and for the rest talks are on with sponsors and others who are interested in spending on this mission.”

Tata, Nandan Nilekani (Infosys), Sachin Bansal and  Binny Bansal (Flipkart) and Venu Srinivasan (TVS Group), K  Kasturirangan (former ISRO chief) among others are supporting  TeamIndus as its advisers.

Other than TeamIndus the other four finalist teams who  have a verified launch contracts are SpaceIL (Israel), Moon Express (USA), Synergy Moon (International) and HAKUTO (Japan).