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Russian probe crashes into Moon – Roscosmos | Russian probe crashes into Moon – Roscosmos |
(32 minutes later) | |
The accident occurred after Luna-25 switched to an incorrect orbit, Russia’s space agency says | The accident occurred after Luna-25 switched to an incorrect orbit, Russia’s space agency says |
Russia’s Luna-25 automatic interplanetary station has collided with the Moon, space agency Roscosmos has said. | Russia’s Luna-25 automatic interplanetary station has collided with the Moon, space agency Roscosmos has said. |
“According to the results of a preliminary analysis… the Luna-25 spacecraft switched to a non-designated orbit and ceased to operate due to a collision with the surface of the Moon,” Roscosmos said on Sunday. | “According to the results of a preliminary analysis… the Luna-25 spacecraft switched to a non-designated orbit and ceased to operate due to a collision with the surface of the Moon,” Roscosmos said on Sunday. |
The probe was due to receive a signal to form a pre-landing elliptical orbit on Saturday, but communication was lost at 14:57 Moscow time (11: 57 GMT), the agency explained. Efforts on Saturday and Sunday to locate the craft and restore contact were unsuccessful. | |
A commission involving representatives of several agencies will be assembled to establish the reasons for the loss of the probe, Roscosmos said. | |
Luna-25 was launched on August 11 by a Soyuz 2.1b rocket from the Vostochny Cosmodrome in the Amur Region of Russia’s Far East. It was the first probe sent to the Moon by Russia since the Soviet era. | |
The mission aimed to achieve the first ever landing near the south pole of Earth’s satellite, known for its difficult terrain. | |
The spacecraft reached lunar orbit earlier this week, sending back high-resolution photos of the dark side of the Moon. Its landing was scheduled to take place on or around August 21. | |
The main goal of the mission was to examine the lunar soil for the presence of ice, with Roscosmos also saying it wanted to test soft-landing technology and conduct long-term research on the lunar exosphere and the upper layer of the south pole’s surface. |
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