Russia is revisiting its Soviet space heritage for a new series of missions that will take the nation back to the moon. It must be remembered that Soviets were the first nation to send a probe to the moon and Soviet Moon Missions were very important during the Space Race. Now the Russian Federation Space program wants to build upon the legacy of Soviet Space Program.
Luna 25. The lander that will launch in October is designed to study ice permanently frozen below the moon’s surface, which would-be explorers hope to tap into as a resource, and to evaluate the dangers posed by sharp fragments of lunar dust. As it lands, the spacecraft will use a European-built camera to advance the European Space Agency’s future lunar missions.
But Luna 25 is only the beginning, Zelenyi emphasized, walking through a total of five lunar missions in various planning stages. In 2023 or 2024, Russia plans to launch Luna 26, this time an orbiter that would look for magnetic and gravitational anomalies in the moon and capture high-precision images of potential landing sites.
Then, in 2025, it would be back to the surface with Luna 27, which Zelenyi called “I think the most important.” Like the lander arriving this year, Luna 27 will target the moon’s south pole and carry European landing software. But also on the robot courtesy of the European Space Agency would be a first: a drill that can gather south-pole lunar rock without melting compounds like water ice found in the material.
The final two missions in the Luna series as described by Zelenyi don’t yet have launch dates. But Luna 28, also known as Luna-Grunt, would build directly on its predecessor by bringing back to Earth cryogenically stored samples from the lunar south pole that would retain water ice and other so-called volatile compounds.
“It’s sample return, but a different sample return than has been done earlier,” Zelenyi said. “It will be … not just regolith [lunar dirt] but all volatiles and cryogenic inclusions to it, which is technically challenging.”
Finally, Luna 29 would carry a new Lunokhod rover, harkening back again to Soviet missions. Lunokhod-1 became the first successful rover on another world in 1970 and spent 10 months exploring the region dubbed Mare Imbrium, or the Sea of Rains.
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