While waiting for LOI, just for fun doing some calculations ..remembering classical Newtonian mechanics (I had fun teaching those graduate courses with central force and elliptical orbits).. Playing with JPL/Horizon data/ Sankar V's excellent app..
(The closest lunar approach upon insertion seems to be 202 km altitude occurring at 7:29 pm IST on 5th August
I don't have official ISRO ephemeris but ist should be close )
Sharing some positions/orbits as I post: (
All on scale - HT Sankar V)
(Some pictures have stars/constellations in the background -
Again accurately so one can get the directions correctly -- for those who are familiar with stars and constellations - There are no up or down like we use on Earth but star background is same if you look from earth or the moon and unlike Sun or Moon etc, there position do not change with time... )
(At present, as I post, (11:24 EDT = GMT -4) CY3 is about:
From Earth - 362,000Km (from center) , speed 0.25 Km/sec (wrt to earth)
From Moon - 83,250 Km (from center, about 81,510 from surface), speed = 0.90 Km/sen (wrt to moon)
From Sun - Of course, ~ 150 Million Km, speed = 30 Km/sec (wrt to Sun) etc
Date and Time stamp:

Orbit XY- Plane (Earth Perspective) (This is 2-D plane - in which moon orbits around Earth - Most(almost all) orbits of CY3 are roughly in this plane though it does a do a small amount of up-down ( direction of North Pole of Earth/Moon is up here) on this plane -- final orbit of CY3 will be perpendicular to this plane)
At present:
In 3D - At the time of LOI (Closest approach to the Moon)
Different perspective Orbit: YZ Plane:
Moon Perspective:
If all goes well, at LOI if you look out the window of CY3:
-- After LOI ( Tomorrow) - after last update on the burn and new orbit(s) will be more precisely calculated - Probably there will be 4- 5 burns, (all carefully planned and calculated by ISRO - I am still impressed with how accurate they can manage the burn) before a nice polar circular orbit is achieved.