Indian Space Research Organisation on Sunday took to ‘X’, formerly known as Twitter to share the first images of Moon as captured by Chandrayaan-3. India’s third unmanned Moon mission Chandrayaan-3 on Saturday successfully entered the lunar orbit, 22 days after it was launched for a far more complicated 41-day voyage to reach the lunar south pole where no other nation has gone before. Over the next 24 hours, a set of complex maneuvers performed by the Telemetry, Tracking, and Command Network in Bengaluru will ensure that the module is pulled into the Moon`s gravitational sphere in a process called Lunar Orbit Insertion.