Moon Society and Moon Miners' Manifesto
Announceour New MMM-India Quarterly Edition


MMM-India Quarterly Masthead

Update: July 20, 2011 - First 11 issues ready to Download


Cover issue #1Cover Issue #2Cover issue #3Cover issue #4Cover issue #5Cover issue #6Cover issue #7Cover issue #8cover issue #9 cover #12

Just click on the Cover of any Issue to download it.

Shown above is the  masthead of the current quarterly edition of MMM-India being published for the space community in India.
We have been publishing this Quarterly edition, in pdf format only, with the download link to be emailed to various organizations and email-lists in India and elsewhere.

While is a strong focus on India's space program and India's future in space, including the Chandrayaan-1 lunar orbiter and proposed future lunar missions, there is also Indian space news in general, plus a selection of articles from MMM issues current and past deemed by the editorial board to be of interest to Indian readers.

India has the largest English-speaking population of any country in the world. This is a legacy of the long British Raj (rule) prior to India's independence in I947.  India publishes more books in English than any other country. English is in fact a world language and it belongs as much to India as it does to speakers in Britain, the US, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, and everywhere else that the British Union Jack once ruled: Nigeria, Ghana, Kenya, Tanzania, Singapore, and more.

India is now a member of the Lunar Exploration Club, along with the USA, Russia (formerly USSR, China, and Japan. Its former president, Dr. A. P. J. Abdul Kalam, eloquently sketched India's future in space in an April 12, 2007 address at Boston University on the occasion of the 50th anniversary of the dawn of the Space Age with the launch of Sputnik 1. See the front page In Focus editorial in MMM #205, May 2007

In this speech he saw the need for India to turn to Solar Power Satellites (1) to build with lunar materials, for the energy the country would need to industrialize if it desired to share the prosperity of the West, and (2) to desalinize seawater so that India's growing population could have abundant clean water.

Unfortunately, Kalam, a rocket scientist, was unpopular for other reasons, and not re-elected. The point is, the word is out. If India is to attain or share a world leadership role, it must go to the Moon and access the resources there. This is a vision we want to encourage and the timing could not be more appropriate.

We released our introductory issue just after Chandrayaan-1 had settled into its design lunar orbit and had begun its two year science mission, with the release of its Impact Probe which successfully crashed at the Lunar South Pole in an attempt to release suspected ice/water vapor in the splashout.
The initial editorial staff includes Peter Kokh (editor of Moon Miners' Manifesto), David A. Dunlop (Society Director of Project Development), and Madhu Thangavelu (author and educator at the University of Southern California).
 
Our intent has been to circulate this publication freely, so that anyone can access it. Of course, in each issue, we will advertise Moon Miners' Manifesto, which will continue to be available only as a Moon Society membership benefit.
November 14, 2009 - With issue #4, Srinivas Laxman and Pradeep Mohandas, both in Mumbai, Inida, join our editorial team. Also with this issue, comes the announcement of the formation of Moon Society India, as an autonomous affiliate of The Moon Society (International.) This effort involves Mohandas, Laxman, (both in Mumbai), Jayashree Sridhar (Chennai) and Avinash Siavuru (Vellore.) We expect Moon Society India to grow quickly.
The intention of Moon Society India is to phase in editorial and publishing takeover of M3IQ" over the coming year, to make it their own. Such a development is exactly what we intended in launching this publication a year ago.

The Moon Society has always sought to be an International one, but except for a handful plus of members in Canada, Mexico, Ireland, the UK, Sweden, Australia, Chile, and elsewhere, this goal has remained illusive.
If you have suggestions or feedback on this publication and outreach venture, send them to

mmm-india@moonsociety.org


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