Science

India triumphs in maiden Mars mission

A father and his son look at information about planet Mars on a poster put up at the Nehru Planetarium as a special preview on India's Mars Orbiter Mission, in Bangalore.
Manjunath Kiran | AFP| Getty Images

India's low-cost mission to Mars successfully entered the red planet's orbit on Wednesday, crowning India as the first country to complete the trip at its maiden attempt.

The success of the Mars Orbiter Mission, lauded for its low price tag of $74 million, will boost India's five-decade-old space program that newly-elected Prime Minister Narendra Modi aims to expand with better infrastructure and technology.

With a spacecraft around Mars, India joins a small group of nations - the United States, Russia and Europe - that have successfully sent probes to orbit or land on Mars. Others, however, failed several times initially.

Read MoreIndia's Mars mission enters second stage

Celebrations began at the command center at the southern city of Bangalore after delayed communication signals confirmed the spacecraft had entered Martian orbit.

Modi, who sat behind scientists, looked tensed during the final moments. He congratulated scientists after the feat was achieved.

"India has successfully reached Mars. Congratulations to all," Modi said in an address at the command center.

Read MoreIndia counts down to ambitious Mars mission

"History has been created today. We have dared to reach out into the unknown and have achieved the near impossible."

The state-run Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) successfully ignited the main 440 Newton liquid engine and eight small thrusters that fired for 24-minutes and trimmed the speed of the craft to allow smooth orbit insertion under Mars' shadow.