2023-08-16 15:05:38
A picture taken from the camera of the lunar landing spacecraft Luna-25 shows the mission emblem and the bucket of the lunar manipulator complex ROSCOSMOS / VIA REUTERS
Moscow’s Luna-25 lander was successfully placed in the Moon’s orbit on Wednesday, August 16, the first such Russian mission in almost 50 years, space agency Roscosmos announced.
With the lunar launch, Moscow’s first since 1976, Russia is seeking to restart and rebuild on the Soviet Union’s pioneering space programme.
“For the first time in Russia’s contemporary history, an automatic station was placed in lunar orbit at 12:03 pm Moscow time (0903 GMT),” a Roscosmos spokesperson told news agency AFP.
Read more Russia launches first moon mission in nearly 50 years
The probe will orbit 100 kilometres above the Moon’s surface, before a planned landing on Monday, north of the Boguslawsky crater on the lunar south pole. Cameras installed on the lander have already taken distant shots of the Earth and Moon from space.
“All the Luna-25 systems are operating normally, and communication with it is stable,” the spokesperson said. The lander, weighing around 800 kilograms (1,764 pounds), was carried into space by a Soyuz rocket launched on Friday, August 11, from the Vostochny cosmodrome in Russia’s Far East. It is expected to stay on the Moon for a year, where it is tasked with collecting samples and analysing soil.
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The mission comes as the future of Russia’s long-running co-operation with the West in space looks in doubt, as Moscow presses ahead with its offensive in Ukraine. Russia said it would go ahead with its own lunar plans, despite the European Space Agency announcing it would not co-operate with Moscow on future missions over its actions in Ukraine.
The World with AFP
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