Space exploration is one of the proudest achievements of humankind. India and the USA have both played major roles through their space agencies — ISRO (Indian Space Research Organisation) and NASA (National Aeronautics and Space Administration).

In competitive exams, questions related to famous space missions, their launch years, objectives, and achievements are frequently asked.

Here’s a complete, easy-to-understand article for your Static GK section on “Space Missions: Chandrayaan, Mangalyaan & NASA Missions” — perfect for exams like SSC, UPSC, Railway, Banking, Defence, and other government exams.

Chandrayaan Missions (India’s Moon Missions)

 1. Chandrayaan-1 (2008)

  • Launch Date: 22 October 2008
  • Launch Vehicle: PSLV-C11
  • Objective: To study the Moon’s surface and minerals.
  • Major Achievement:
    • Discovered water molecules on the Moon.
    • Placed India among the few countries with lunar exploration capability.
  • Mission Type: Orbiter Mission (No landing).

 2. Chandrayaan-2 (2019)

  • Launch Date: 22 July 2019
  • Launch Vehicle: GSLV Mk III (Bahubali rocket)
  • Objective: Soft landing near the lunar south pole and studying lunar surface.
  • Components: Orbiter, Lander (Vikram), Rover (Pragyan).
  • Outcome:
    • The orbiter successfully operated and sent high-quality images.
    • The lander crash-landed during descent due to a last-minute technical glitch.

 3. Chandrayaan-3 (2023)

  • Launch Date: 14 July 2023
  • Launch Vehicle: LVM3-M4
  • Objective: Demonstrate soft landing capability on the lunar surface.
  • Major Achievement:
    • On 23 August 2023, India became the first country to land near the Moon’s South Pole.
    • India became the 4th nation (after USA, Russia, China) to achieve a soft landing on the Moon.
    • Rover Pragyan confirmed presence of sulphur and other elements.

Mangalyaan – India’s Mars Mission

 Mars Orbiter Mission (MOM) – Mangalyaan (2013)

  • Launch Date: 5 November 2013
  • Launch Vehicle: PSLV-C25
  • Objective: Study Mars’ surface, atmosphere, and mineral composition.
  • Achievement Highlights:
    • India became the first Asian country to reach Mars orbit.
    • Achieved success in the very first attempt — a rare feat.
    • Cost-effective mission — only ₹450 crore (≈ $74 million), cheaper than many Hollywood movies!
    • Operated successfully for 8 years, much longer than planned.

Upcoming ISRO Missions

MissionTarget Planet / PurposeExpected Launch / Status
Aditya-L1Study the Sun’s corona & solar activitySuccessfully launched in 2023
GaganyaanIndia’s first human spaceflight missionPlanned for 2025
Shukrayaan-1Venus Orbiter MissionIn planning stage
Mangalyaan-2Advanced Mars missionProposed

NASA – National Aeronautics and Space Administration

NASA, founded in 1958, is the United States’ space agency, leading in deep-space exploration, astronomy, and human spaceflight.

Some Famous NASA Missions

Mission NameYearObjective / Achievement
Apollo 111969First human landing on the Moon (Neil Armstrong & Buzz Aldrin)
Voyager 1 & 21977Explored outer planets; Voyager 1 entered interstellar space
Hubble Space Telescope1990Provided deep-space images; revolutionized astronomy
Curiosity Rover (Mars)2012Explored Martian surface; found evidence of ancient water
Perseverance Rover (Mars)2021Searching for signs of life; carries “Ingenuity” helicopter
Artemis Program2024 (Planned)Aims to return humans to the Moon and prepare for Mars
James Webb Space Telescope (JWST)2021Deepest ever look into early universe and galaxies

India vs NASA – Space Achievements Comparison

AspectISRO (India)NASA (USA)
Founded19691958
FocusAffordable, indigenous missionsDeep space & manned missions
Moon MissionChandrayaan seriesApollo, Artemis
Mars MissionMangalyaanCuriosity, Perseverance
Human SpaceflightGaganyaan (planned)Apollo, Space Shuttle, ISS
Notable FeatureLow-cost missions, high success rateAdvanced technology, global collaboration

Key Exam Facts

  • Chandrayaan-1 (2008): Discovered water on the Moon.
  • Mangalyaan (2013): India’s first interplanetary mission; reached Mars in first attempt.
  • Chandrayaan-3 (2023): India first to land near lunar south pole.
  • NASA Apollo 11 (1969): First human landing on Moon.
  • Voyager 1 (1977): First human-made object to enter interstellar space.

Summary

India’s space achievements through ISRO’s Chandrayaan and Mangalyaan have made the country a global leader in low-cost space exploration.

Meanwhile, NASA continues to push the boundaries of human knowledge with missions to the Moon, Mars, and beyond.

Both space agencies remind us that the sky is not the limit — it’s just the beginning.