Chandrayaan-3 was successfully inserted into lunar orbit after a journey of twenty-three days.
It marks a significant step in India’s endeavour to become the first nation to achieve a soft landing on the moon.
As the spacecraft started circling the moon, it began transmitting signals to the Mission Operators Complex (MOX) at the ISRO Telemetry, Tracking and Command Network (ISTRAC).
As of now, Chandrayaan-3 is in an elliptical orbit around the moon.
It is situated approximately 18,074 km from the lunar surface at its farthest point and 164 km at its nearest.
However, this elliptical orbit is not the final configuration.
The mission aims to achieve a circular orbit, with an altitude of 100 km x 100km above the moon’s surface.
ISRO will carry out four orbit manoeuvres to make the spacecraft enter into its final orbit.
The Chandrayaan-3 consists of a lander module (LM), a propulsion module (PM) and a rover.
The lander is expected to touch down on the moon surface on August 23.