Why in the News?
- India and Japan have officially entered into a partnership on Chandrayaan-5, marking a joint lunar endeavour, also called as LUPEX Mission.
Lunar Polar Exploration Mission (LUPEX Mission)
- What is it?:
- A joint mission of ISRO (India) and JAXA (Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency).
- Aims to explore the lunar south pole region, which is believed to contain water ice and other resources crucial for future lunar habitation.
- Objectives:
- Detect and quantify lunar water (in the form of ice) at the south pole.
- Study the lunar surface and subsurface composition.
- Assess the possibility of sustainable lunar exploration by humans.
- Test advanced rover and lander technologies for future missions.
- Mission Components:
- Launch Vehicle: Japan’s H3 rocket.
- Lander: Developed by JAXA, capable of precise soft-landing in rugged polar terrain.
- Rover: Developed by ISRO, designed to:
- Drill up to 1 metre below the lunar surface.
- Analyse soil for water molecules and volatiles.
- Payloads:
- ISRO & JAXA scientific instruments.
- NASA may also contribute technology (like the neutron spectrometer).
- Significance:
- Strengthens India-Japan space cooperation.
- Complements India’s Chandrayaan-3 success by focusing on polar resource mapping.
- Supports global efforts for sustainable space economy (lunar bases, in-situ resource utilisation).
- Enhances India’s role in future human lunar missions.
- Challenges:
- Technical Challenges: Precision landing at lunar south pole and rover drilling capacity challenges.
- Scientific Challenges: Damage to systems due to Lunar dust, challenges in communication arising due to blockage of line of sight.
- Logistical and Financial Challenges: High cost of deep space missions and Time and cost incurred on testing and integration.
- Strategic Challenge: Technology demonstration pressure on ISRO and JAXA.