If things go as planned, India's unmanned moon spacecraft -- Chandrayaan-1 -- embarks on a two-year mission tomorrow seeking to throw more light on earth's only natural satellite.
The event would mark India's entry into select band of lunar explorers -- the European Space Agency (ESA), Japan [Images], China, the US and Russia [Images] which have undertaken moon missions.
The lift-off is slated around 0620 hours on board indigenously-built rocket, PSLV-C11, from the spaceport of Sriharikota on the east coast in Andhra Pradesh, some 100 km north of Chennai.
Click here to watch the live broadcast of the historic launch! (Viewed in Internet Explorer)