KEY POINTS
  • Perhaps the most remarkable aspect of India's moon landing is the shoestring budget — by government standards — the country spent to achieve the mission.
  • The country's Chandrayaan-3 spacecraft is the first vehicle to land near the moon's south pole.
  • The mission's price tag is on par with the lowest-cost private lunar lander projects in the U.S.
The shadow of the Chandrayaan-3 spacecraft is seen on the moon's surface.

The list is grim reading: Stuck, failed, missed, failed, failed, stuck, failed, crashed, missed, crashed, crashed.

Those were the fate of the Soviet Union's first 11 attempts before successfully landing a spacecraft on the moon, according to a database compiled by Jonathan McDowell, an astrophysicist at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics who catalogs space missions.