This Article is From Sep 23, 2014

Mangalyaan, the Cheapest Mars Mission Ever

The Mars mission has been put together at a record cost of Rs 450 crore.

Bangalore: As India closes in on its destination Mars with the Mangalyaan satellite, many across the world have been dumbstruck at the low cost of India's Mars Orbiter mission. Here are the details on how India achieved this seemingly impossible task, becoming the envy of the world.(India's Mars Orbiter, Mangalyaan Clears Crucial Test)

This golden satellite, approximately the size of a Nano car, and the entire Mars Orbiter mission have been made ready at a record cost of Rs 450 crore or nearly $67 million dollars. (Watch the Video)

Put together by the Indian Space Research Organisation or ISRO in a record time of 15 months, it has been on a 300-day marathon, covering some 670 million kilometres to reach its destination Mars. This is undoubtedly the lowest-cost inter-planetary mission ever to be undertaken in the world. (In Asian Space Race, India Inches Closer to Beating China to Mars)

On his recent visit to India's rocket port in June, Prime Minister Narendra Modi had remarked, "The Hollywood movie Gravity cost more than our Mars mission - this is a great achievement." (Watch: Mission Mars: Countdown Continues, Will India Make History?)

NASA's latest mission to Mars called MAVEN, which incidentally reached the Red Planet on Monday ahead of the Indian satellite, costs ten times more. (NASA's MAVEN Enters Mars Orbit)

"This has been a cheap mission. But we have not compromised; we have done it in two years and ground testing has helped," said K Radhakrishnan, Chairman of ISRO.

The darling of Martian dreamers -- American rover Curiosity which has been sitting on the surface of the Red Planet -- cost over a whopping 2 billion dollars. India's technological capabilities and frugal bills have help cut costs. (PM Modi to Witness Mars Orbiter Insertion at ISRO Facility

Mangalyaan is the cheapest inter-planetary mission ever to be undertaken anywhere in the world. It has cost Rs 450 crores or just about Rs 4 per person in India. India is paving the way for faster, cheaper and possibly durable inter-planetary missions.
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