ISRO has released a video of the rover rotating in search of a safe route. The rotation was captured by a lander imager camera.
"It feels as though a child is playfully frolicking in the yards of Chandamama, while the mother watches affectionately.
Isn't it?" ISRO quipped in the social media post.
The space agency released a video showing an automated hinge mechanism rotating the 18 cm tall APXS, aligning the detector head to be approximately five centimetres in proximity to the lunar surface.
The 26-kg, six-wheeled, solar-powered Pragyan rover is equipped to use its scientific instruments to record what the lunar soil and rocks are made of in the south polar region where Chandrayaan-3 landed and it would also show how the readings contrast with that of the highland regions.
APXS instrument is best suited for in-situ analysis of the elemental composition of soil and rocks on the surface of planetary bodies having little atmosphere, such as the Moon, an ISRO statement said.