
After a few weeks of work, India’s Pragyan rover on the Moon’s south pole was put to sleep last weekend to sit out the long lunar evening. It accomplished all of its goals, according to a Tweet from the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO):

We shall know in a few weeks whether the little lander is ready for more work.
Nature magazine noted some of the findings from the rover’s primary mission, including:
- ions and electrons swirling near the lunar pole;
- variations in soil temperature;
- a moonquake; and
- presence of sulfur and other elements.
Whatever happens, the Indian rover has been a great success.