American Talk
  • Home
  • Business
  • Leadership
  • Economics
  • Recruitment
  • Innovation
  • Strategy
  • More
    • Customer Experience
    • Managing People
    • Managing Yourself
    • Communication
    • Marketing
    • Organizational Culture
    • Technology
Featured Posts
    • Hiring and Recruitment
    Resilient Companies Start with Proactive Leader Mental Wellness
    • September 30, 2023
    • News
    Chargers to place All-Pro Corey Linsley on IR with heart issue
    • September 30, 2023
    • Business
    Afghan currency posts world-beating rally in third quarter
    • September 30, 2023
    • Hiring and Recruitment
    The Importance of Investing in Employee Development
    • September 30, 2023
    • News
    Judge dismisses discrimination lawsuit against Texas A&M, says professor who filed suit never applied for job
    • September 30, 2023
Featured Categories
Business
View Posts
Hiring and Recruitment
View Posts
News
View Posts
Press
View Posts
Trending
View Posts
American Talk
7K
9K
4K
1K
American Talk
  • Home
  • Business
  • Leadership
  • Economics
  • Recruitment
  • Innovation
  • Strategy
  • More
    • Customer Experience
    • Managing People
    • Managing Yourself
    • Communication
    • Marketing
    • Organizational Culture
    • Technology
  • Business

Russia’s first post-Soviet Moon mission ends in space crash

  • August 20, 2023
  • admin
Total
0
Shares
0
0
0

Receive free Space exploration updates

We’ll send you a myFT Daily Digest email rounding up the latest Space exploration news every morning.

Russia’s first Moon mission since 1976, when it was still part of the Soviet Union, has ended in failure after its unmanned spacecraft Luna-25 spun out of control and crashed into the Moon’s surface.

It had been due to land on the South Pole of the Moon on Monday.

The setback for Russia’s increasingly isolated and cash-strapped Roscosmos space agency underscores the decline of Moscow’s space programme since its peak in the cold war when the Soviet Union was the first to send a person into space.

The Luna-25 was launched from Earth earlier this month, with Russia hoping to become the first country to land on the South Pole of the Moon. Once there, the lunar lander mission was supposed to spend a year studying the Moon’s surface and exosphere, and conducting other research.

But on Saturday afternoon, as the craft was transitioning from a circular orbit about 100km above the Moon’s surface into a pre-landing orbit, communication was lost.

The impulse that was meant to trigger the transition pushed it off course, sending it on the wrong trajectory of orbit, the space agency said.

“According to the results of preliminary analysis, due to the deviation of the actual parameters of the impulse from the calculated ones, the Luna-25 spacecraft moved to a non-calculated orbit,” Roscosmos said in a statement. It then “ceased to exist as a result of collision with the surface of the moon.”

“Measures implemented on August 19 and 20 to search for the spacecraft and communicate with it did not yield any results,” the space agency said, adding that an interdepartmental commission had been formed to investigate the incident.

The Luna-25 was launched on August 10 from the Vostochny Cosmodrome in Russia’s Far East and marked the country’s first Moon mission since 1976, when the Soviet Union launched the Luna-24. That robot lander successfully returned to Earth carrying lunar soil samples for scientists to study.

In the Luna-25 mission, Russia was racing to beat India, whose Chandrayaan-3 spacecraft is approaching the Moon’s South Pole region and is scheduled to make its landing on Wednesday.

The Luna-25 crash raises doubts about the future of Russia’s space programme, particularly at a time when the country is engaged in a draining and costly war in Ukraine, with sanctions and international opprobrium over its invasion cutting off access to western technology and research.

Roscosmos has been teaming up with the Russian army to sponsor a battalion of volunteer soldiers to fight in Ukraine, the Financial Times has reported.

“Any failure in space, it a priori affects the future plans of either a particular country or a particular programme,” Alexander Zheleznyakov, an expert in the rocket and space industry and a historian of cosmonautics, was cited by Russian business newspaper RBC as saying.

“In our case, most likely we will have to change the approach to the creation of new landers, because for the 47 years that have passed since the launch of the previous lander, much has changed,” Zheleznyakov said. “Science has moved on and technology has moved on, and unfortunately, over the years we have somewhat lost our competence in interplanetary missions and in landing on other planets.”

“We will have to temper our ambitions somewhat and realise that we will have to learn everything again,” he said.

Another Russian scientist, 90-year-old Mikhail Marov, one of the leading figures in the Soviet space programme, told RBC he was hospitalised from the shock of hearing about the Luna-25 crash, which he called his “life’s work”.

“It is sad that it was not possible to land the apparatus,” he told the magazine. “For me, perhaps, it was the last hope to see the revival of our lunar programme.”

Total
0
Shares
Share 0
Tweet 0
Pin it 0
You May Also Like
Read More
  • Business

Afghan currency posts world-beating rally in third quarter

  • admin
  • September 30, 2023
Read More
  • Business

Nuclear energy: UK to test investors’ appetite

  • admin
  • September 30, 2023
Read More
  • Business

Short cuts: raclette-rafting in Switzerland and a smart new resort on the edge of the Sahara

  • admin
  • September 30, 2023
Read More
  • Business

New EU trade rules could snarl Northern Ireland supply chains, companies warn

  • admin
  • September 30, 2023
Read More
  • Business

China hopes Golden Week holiday will deliver much-needed economic boost

  • admin
  • September 30, 2023
Read More
  • Business

Regulators turn up heat on shadow banks after market blow-ups

  • admin
  • September 29, 2023
Read More
  • Business

Eurozone inflation hits 2-year low as US price pressures ease

  • admin
  • September 29, 2023
Read More
  • Business

Spain’s opposition leader fails to form a government

  • admin
  • September 29, 2023

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Featured Posts
  • 1
    Resilient Companies Start with Proactive Leader Mental Wellness
    • September 30, 2023
  • 2
    Chargers to place All-Pro Corey Linsley on IR with heart issue
    • September 30, 2023
  • 3
    Afghan currency posts world-beating rally in third quarter
    • September 30, 2023
  • 4
    The Importance of Investing in Employee Development
    • September 30, 2023
  • 5
    Judge dismisses discrimination lawsuit against Texas A&M, says professor who filed suit never applied for job
    • September 30, 2023
Recent Posts
  • Nuclear energy: UK to test investors’ appetite
    • September 30, 2023
  • “Greedflation” Isn’t to Blame for High Inflation
    • September 30, 2023
  • Indiana mother allegedly drowns 2 toddlers after doing drugs, says voices told her to send them to heaven
    • September 30, 2023

Sign Up for Our Newsletters

Subscribe now to our newsletter

American Talk
  • Home
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact

Input your search keywords and press Enter.