Evacuation of a Russian city due to the risk of falling missile debris. Luna-25 is Russia’s first lunar lander mission in nearly 50 years, and Russian authorities must temporarily evacuate the entire city below the flight path of the Soyuz rocket.
Evacuation of a Russian city due to the risk of falling missile debris
Russia’s long-delayed Luna-25 robotic mission is on track for launch on August 11, according to a report from the state-run TASS newspaper.
The Luna-25 probe is designed to make a soft landing on the moon’s south pole as the world’s major space players turn their attention to extracting ice from the moon’s south pole region, which can be turned into water, oxygen, and rocket propellants.
Luna-25 is Russia’s first lunar lander since 1976 and will be launched atop a Soyuz 2.1a rocket at the Vostochny space base in eastern Russia.
First, Russian authorities must temporarily evacuate the entire city below the Soyuz rocket’s flight path because of the risk of its propellants falling on the city.
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The first Russian moon lander since 1976
Russian Aerospace Corporation NPO Lavochkina, manufacturer of the Luna-25 lander, announced in a statement that work on the Luna-25 spacecraft has been completed.
According to the plan, this spacecraft is supposed to be the first spacecraft in the world to make a soft landing on the surface of the moon in the South Pole region.
The European Space Agency had planned to test a navigation camera, called Pilot-D, on Luna-25, but canceled its participation in the project after the start of the Russia-Ukraine war last year.
According to TASS, Luna-25 is the first domestically built lunar probe in modern Russian history. The statement of NPO Lavochkina adds that the lunar lander will use complete Russian elements and the latest achievements in the field of space instrumentation.
The statement also explained that the main objective of the mission is to develop basic technologies for a soft landing in the circumpolar region and conduct surface impact studies at the South Pole of the Moon.
The lander will study the upper surface layer around its landing area as well as the lunar exosphere for approximately one Earth year. The purpose of this mission is to help develop lunar soil landing and sampling technologies.
According to Reuters, the Russian government will evacuate the entire city of Shakhtinsky on August 11 before the launch of Luna-25.
This city is located in the Khabarovsk region of Russia and to the southeast of the launch site, which will be evacuated early in the morning since it is below the projected launch path and there is a possibility that the Soyuz rocket boosters will hit it after separating from the spacecraft.
Residents will leave their homes at 7:30 a.m. and then be escorted to a location where they can watch the launch and eat a free breakfast. They could be back home in three and a half hours, and a local Russian official was quoted as saying that there was a one-in-a-million chance that any missile debris would actually land on the city.
Russia competes with India to reach the south pole of the moon
Landers of the former Soviet Union sits on the surface of the Moon’s equatorial region. Luna-25, on the other hand, will land on a rough and difficult surface at the south pole of the moon, near Bogoslavsky Crater.
It was originally expected to be the first lunar lander to land in the region as it was scheduled to land in October 2021. However, a delay of almost two years means that India may reach this uncharted territory sooner.
India’s Chandrayaan-3 mission has reached the moon’s orbit and if everything goes according to plan, it will land on the moon’s south pole around August 23.
According to a separate article from Reuters, Luna-25 is expected to be five to seven days on its way to the moon and spend roughly five days in lunar orbit before its soft landing. This means that contact with the lunar surface will be imminent, but Luna-25 has a chance to reach the lunar surface before Chandrayaan-3.
The last Russian lunar lander mission, Luna-24, was carried out by the former Soviet Union in 1976. This mission collected approximately 170 grams of lunar soil and returned it to Earth.