In today鈥檚 issue our five hand-picked stories look at the credibility of India鈥檚 path to prosperity, an effort to restore聽faith in U.S. justice, redefining the purpose of American capitalism, how blockchain聽builds trust, and our own reporter鈥檚 tug of conscience about evacuating ahead of Dorian.
But first, India is on the verge of its own Apollo 11 moment.
Maybe that鈥檚 a little over the top. India鈥檚 not putting a man on the moon. But this week India could become a member of an exclusive club with only three members: the United States, Russia, and China.
India expects to land a spacecraft on the lunar surface Friday. If all goes well, Chandrayaan-2 will be the first mission to the moon鈥檚 south pole 鈥 where ice has been spotted. India plans to use a rover to map the water as well as rare minerals and elements.
The moon is drier than any desert on Earth, so water makes the south pole an attractive location for future bases. plans to send a crew, including a woman, to the south pole in 2024. The moon is a likely staging area for future missions to Mars.聽
. Nearly 500 universities and 120 companies in India have contributed to this $150 million mission. If successful, Chandrayaan-2 would affirm India鈥檚 global engineering prowess, something already recognized by software developers (as we report below).
But a moon landing would be more than a tech milestone for India. It can sow confidence 鈥 and cosmic dreams 鈥 for an entire generation.