- News>
- Television
Discovery Channel to premiere `Moonbound: India`s Race to the Moon`
Pitted against several resourceful teams from across the globe, does Team Indus stand a chance to win this race for space?
Mumbai: Discovery, the leading infotainment channel, will premiere a one-hour special show titled `Moonbound: India`s Race to the Moon` based on the exciting journey of Team Indus on October 30 at 9 PM.
The show captures the best of this eventful and enlightening seven-year journey of a team which germinated with a group of friends coming together and went on to become Team Indus.
It started in 2007 when The Google Lunar XPRIZE was announced the largest incentivised space exploration challenge in human history. A small group of friends came together and coughed up personal resources to register last minute as the only Indian team in the global contest. This young enthusiast team, with no aerospace background, had the grit, the tenacity to take on the best in the world in their endeavor to win the $30 million, Google Lunar XPRIZE.
Moonbound: India`s Race to the Moon has garnered huge traction from marquee advertisers. The on-air broadcast of the show is Co-Presented by Amazon Echo and Co-Powered by Levi Strauss and PUBG, Nokia as the Mobile Partner. Sony Bravia, ForeverMark, Idea 4G, Honda Motorcycles and Phillips Trimmer have come on board as Associate sponsors.
Conceived in a server room in Noida, near India`s capital, Rahul Narayan helmed the whole challenge and took the first step of deciding to participate in this global lunar race. He started looking out for people who would join him out of sheer passion unaware about the challenges the team would face as the race would progress. An inhouse robotic rover named `Ek Choti si Asha` was designed with the Ackerman steering concept and a deployable masthead.
What happened next?
Don`t miss to watch Moonbound: India`s Race to the Moon that brings to you a spectacular journey of an aerospace startup that came together, to reach for the moon!
Can they possibly meet the harsh technical demands of a lunar mission?
And even so, from where will they raise the enormous amount needed to get to the moon!