Rahul Narayan had no clue about space. In 2010,Laruan he was in the software industry, running a startup that developed products for an ecommerce company.
Who knew seven years later, he would on his way sending a rover to the moon?
SEE ALSO: A private spaceflight company just got approval to land a spacecraft on the moonNarayan and his friends were intrigued by Google Lunar X-Prize competition announced in 2010.
The competition invited private companies to land a rover on the moon, make it travel for 500 meters and beam high resolution photos and videos back to Earth.
"We were looking and saying that if any Indian team is doing this we got to be a part of this. Whether building software or doing marketing, this is the project of a lifetime," Narayan told Mashabletwo months ago at the Team Indus campus in Bangalore.
"We asked around and there was no Indian team. Therefore, the only option left was that we had to be the Indian team. So going from 'hey, we will help in marketing' and being a part of the team to figuring out everything from the basics and Wikipedia [on] how to build a spacecraft. That is the true story."
On Thursday, Team Indus announced it had become the first private company to have secured a dedicated rocket from the government-funded Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO).
If all goes according to plan, Team Indus' home-manufactured spacecraft will fly aboard ISRO's Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PLSV) during a three-day launch window beginning Dec. 28, 2017.
The PSLV will inject the spacecraft in an orbit 880 km x 70,000 km around the Earth. The spacecraft will then embark upon a 21-day journey and land in Mare Imbrium, a region in the North-Western hemisphere of the Moon.
Team Indus was one of the last teams to register for the competition.
Over the last couple of years, they went from figuring out whether they could do it, to hiring a team that could take them closer to achieving the task.
But the watershed moment came when Lunar X-Prize shortlisted them for a Milestone challenge and they won $1 million towards landing technology.
Since then, Team Indus has raised funding from renowned Indian industrialists and entrepreneurs like Ratan Tata of the Tata Group, Infosys co-founder Nandan Nilekani, Flipkart co-founders Sachin Bansal and Binny Bansal, and many more.
One of the rules of the Google Lunar X-Prize is that the mission should be at least 90 percent funded by private sources.
The group has built a team comprising 100 people, mostly youngsters fresh out of college along with 20 retired ISRO scientists with rich experience of space missions.
Team Indus was one of the last teams to register for the competition.
For its part, ISRO is now one of the world's most renowned space agencies, having successfully sent missions to Mars, launched record number of satellites in a single mission and helped India establish its own GPS system.
Team Indus is now the fourth team worldwide to have secured a launch contract and considers itself as one of the front runners in the challenge.
Israeli team SpaceIL secured a contract in Oct. 2015 and is scheduled to launch aboard a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket in the second half of next year.
American team Moon Express announced its contract with Rocket Lab's Electron rockets and is also scheduled for launch in 2017.
An international team, Synergy Systems, became the third team to secure a launch vehicle and is also scheduled to go to the Moon in the second half of 2017. One of the team members, Interorbital Systems, will be the launch provider and will use a Neptune 8 rocket.
But the Google Lunar X-Prize is just the beginning for the Indian startup, which feels it already has a foot in the door in the growing private industry of space exploration.
"As Team Indus goes ahead, whether or not it wins the competition, I think one impact that will come out, is any group of five people can start and build something that can land on the moon.
"If that is possible, then anything is possible," Narayan says.
Previous:Get Thee to a City of Ladies
NFL Sunday Ticket deal: $449 value for free with VerizonUSA basketball Paris 2024 livestream: Watch live basketball for freeTesla recalls 1.8 million cars over hood issueCoco Gauff Paris 2024 livestream: Watch live tennis for freeLebron James Paris 2024 livestream: Watch live basketball for freeWhen is Simone Biles competing at the Olympics today? Women's gymnastics finals schedule.'House of the Dragon' used a surprising piece of gym equipment to film dragonUSA vs. South Sudan livestream: Watch live basketball for freeSha’Carri Richardson Paris 2024 livestream: Watch live athletics for freeNoah Lyles Paris 2024 livestream: Watch Men's 100m for free'House of the Dragon' used a surprising piece of gym equipment to film dragonArtistic Gymnastics Men’s Team Final Paris 2024 highlights: Watch USA Bronze for freeBest earbuds deal: Get the Soundcore by Anker P20i earbuds at a 50% discount from Amazon.Google rolls out call and WiEliud Kipchoge Paris 2024 livestream: Watch Men's Marathon for freeCycling road race Paris 2024 livestream: Watch live road race for freeParis 2024 Olympics: Daters are changing their app location to France'Star Wars Outlaws' preview: Fine but forgettableYouTube's war on ad blockers continues, now making ads truly unskippable'Marvel Spider Netflix's post Stolen penguin at risk after being released into the wild Women's mag tweets without a link for context are absurdly hilarious Uber is refunding surge Ethereum's 'Constantinople' upgrade postponed to late February Sony's adorable robot dog Aibo now comes in chocolate 'Black Panther' cast and crew react to the movie's seven Oscar nods This might be the most inappropriate shirt ever sold on Walmart's website French regulator fines Google $57 million for GDPR violations Why nobody should mourn Microsoft ending support for Windows 10 Mobile Unsealed docs will detail how Facebook made money off children 'Mortal Kombat 11' is more than just a fighting game: Hands on review Black man police killed over his 'shooting stance' was holding a vape pen Google Hangouts is shutting down for some users in October Netflix now lets you share directly to your Instagram Story 2019 Oscars: Full list of nominations Ja Rule seems to think he's the real victim of the Fyre Festival docs Gillian Anderson will play Margaret Thatcher on 'The Crown' Season 4 Facebook to teens: Plz laugh at these old memes Facebook Live captures tragic aftermath of police shooting in El Cajon