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ISRO Chandrayaan-4 Lunar Sample Return Launch
Event overview
India's first lunar sample-return mission — dual LVM-3 launch, south-pole regolith collection (up to 3 kg).
Launch of Chandrayaan-4, India's first Moon sample-return mission. The plan calls for two LVM-3 rockets lofting a five-module spacecraft stack that will rendezvous in Earth orbit, travel to the lunar south pole, collect up to three kilograms of regolith and fly the sample back to Earth for analysis.
ISRO Chairman V. Narayanan told news outlets in late 2025 that Chandrayaan-4 is now targeted for an October 2027 launch, following cabinet approval of a roughly ₹2,104-crore programme in September 2024. Unlike Chandrayaan-3, the successor uses a distributed five-module architecture: a Propulsion Module, a Descender Module, an Ascender Module, a Transfer Module and a Re-entry Module. Two LVM-3 flights are required because the combined stack exceeds the lifter's single-launch throw capacity to a trans-lunar trajectory.
The landing zone neighbours Chandrayaan-3's Shiv Shakti Point, inside the southern high-latitude band where water-ice deposits are suspected within permanently shadowed craters. Surface operations aim to scoop and drill regolith, seal up to three kilograms into the Ascender, and lift off the Moon for a lunar-orbit rendezvous and docking — a first for India. The Re-entry Module then carries the sample through Earth's atmosphere for recovery. The mission directly feeds data and engineering heritage to the planned India–Japan LUPEX rover mission and to long-term aspirations for an Indian crewed lunar landing by 2040. Key subsystem work is divided across the U R Rao Satellite Centre for avionics, the Vikram Sarabhai Space Centre for the propulsion stack, the Liquid Propulsion Systems Centre for cryogenic elements, and the Space Applications Centre for science payloads. Industry partners confirmed by ISRO include Hindustan Aeronautics Limited and Larsen & Toubro on structural assemblies.
October 2027 matches a lunar launch window with favourable lighting at the south pole and acceptable trans-lunar injection geometry for LVM-3. It also slots Chandrayaan-4 between the crewed Gaganyaan H1 flight in early 2027 and the Bharatiya Antariksh Station module launch in late 2028 — a narrow window when ISRO has both pad availability and engineering bandwidth. A slip would push sample return into a period already stacked with the station build-up. The lunar south-pole landing window repeats every 29.5 days tied to the synodic month, so a missed October slot could plausibly defer launch to November 2027 or to a 2028 window when the sun angle at Shiv Shakti Point again supports descent imaging.
Chandrayaan-4 forces ISRO to qualify two capabilities that no previous Indian mission has demonstrated: autonomous lunar-orbit rendezvous and docking, and sample hand-over between the Ascender and Transfer modules under lunar gravity conditions. SpaDeX, the December 2024 docking demonstrator, validated the baseline docking mechanism in low Earth orbit; Chandrayaan-4 must extend that heritage to a 3.84-lakh kilometre regime with longer communication delays. The Re-entry Module inherits thermal-protection lineage from the Space Capsule Recovery Experiment of 2007 and the Gaganyaan TV-D1 in-flight abort test of October 2023. Curation protocols will be drafted with reference to NASA's Apollo and Artemis lunar-sample standards and JAXA's Hayabusa2 sample handling playbook.
Chandrayaan-4 links tightly to Shukrayaan Venus orbiter launch and Shukrayaan orbit insertion, which share LVM-3 manifesting. Cross-region planetary context comes from NASA Dragonfly launch.
When exactly is Chandrayaan-4? ISRO has publicly targeted October 2027; the exact launch date will be set closer to the mission after vehicle assembly at Sriharikota and the first LVM-3 campaign completes pad turnaround.
Is Chandrayaan-4 confirmed or expected? Confirmed and funded by the Union Cabinet in September 2024; the October 2027 date is the current ISRO target, not a firm contractual commitment.
Who is responsible for Chandrayaan-4? ISRO, with the Space Applications Centre, U R Rao Satellite Centre and Vikram Sarabhai Space Centre leading the modules, and HAL and L&T supporting major structural assemblies.
Where can I read the official announcement? isro.gov.in, PIB releases archived at pib.gov.in, and news reporting including News9 and The Hindu.
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