On the 1st of May, the  Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) said
that it was planning to launch Chandrayaan-2.
This would be India’s second launch to the moon.
However, sources say that there is still a lot of work left to be done, before the launch.
Chandrayaan 2 has three parts.
 1) The Orbiter,
2) Lander (Vikram)
3) Rover (Pragyan)
Once Chandrayaan reaches close to the moon,
the Lander (Vikram) will separate from the Orbiter
and land at a site which is already decided close to the south pole of the moon.
This site has not been explored by other countries.
ISRO's Chairman is K. Sivan said,
that once the Lander (Vikram) lands on the surface of the moon,
the Rover (Pragyan) will come out of it and will move on the moon for 300-400 meters.
It will spend 14 earth days on the moon to carry out various scientific experiments.
Last year, ISRO missed their deadline since they had to make many changes in the design.
Also, the Lander (Vikram) had been damaged during trials. It needed to be fixed.
The launch of this mission was planned to be in April 2018, but the ISRO kept postponing it due to certain difficulties.
In January 2019 too, the ISRO missed their deadline for the same reason.
If Chandrayaan 2 successfully lands on the moon in September,
India will become the fourth country to successfully land on the moon.
