Russian Rovers on the Moon 707
An Ignorant American writes "Perusing an Air & Space magazine the other day, I came across an article about Russian Moon Rovers during the space-race era. Thanks to my American science education, I had never heard of this feat. I asked around (friends and coworkers) and nobody else I've talked to has heard of them either. They were called 'lunokhod', and were the first of their kind. Unmanned, remotely operated rovers with basic instrumentation. Two were successfully landed on the Moon, each driving for many miles on the Moon's surface, returning tens of thousands of pictures. You can do a Google Search to start your education, or read what they have to say at Wikipedia on the subject (Wikipedia also has some external links.)"
Robots had another purpose (Score:5, Interesting)
This was done under a program name of "Timofeev". Timofeev is just a common Russian last name and seems to have no special meaning (not referring to a lead scientist/government official, etc).
Pretty successful, until (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Pretty successful, until (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Robots had another purpose (Score:5, Informative)
As for name, russian engineering projects are most often named after the lead engineer or location where they are made (common for russian planes and cars, like MiG actually is a shortened version of Mikoyan-Gurevich - names of the design team leads)
Re:Robots had another purpose (Score:5, Interesting)
Your uncle fell for that? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Robots had another purpose (Score:5, Interesting)
What's the point? (Score:5, Insightful)
What's the point of exploring space if we don't go there? The Europeans (and unlucky Africans) that settled North and South America didn't send something to report back saying, "Oh, that's nice", they went there. The U.S., Canada, Mexico, and all of Central and South America as they are now is the result. Yes, negative ramifications abounded, but the collective we wouldn't be where we are today if it weren't for those circumstances. Humanity is stronger because we are spread out, and if we actually get the guts to try to go into space permanently we will be stronger still. I'd like to hope that all of the work we do isn't for nothing in the long haul. We're the most versatile living thing to come about in known history. Let's see what we can really do.
Re:What's the point? (Score:3, Insightful)
OK, what's the point of exploring the inside of a volcano, or the bottom of the ocean, or the surface of the sun if we don't go there? Humans are fragile, but our curiosity is strong, and the knowledge we gain is useful.
The rest of your argument seems to be based on the principle of "manifest destiny". This is not necessarily a good thing.
Re:What's the point? (Score:4, Interesting)
I once posted in a discussion on fark.com about a different space mission, made a comment in passing about the fact that there were US and Soviet craft on the moon, and somebody informed me, with disdain, that all the flags on the Moon were American.
Nope. Not by a long shot, they weren't. Even the tiny Luna 9 carried some Soviet memorabilia.
Re:Robots had another purpose (Score:5, Interesting)
Why?
Because the Soviet leadership did not want to admit that it had failed to beat Project Apollo to a manned landing. So all those things were hidden, and the Soviets claimed that all along, they had focused on staying safely in Earth orbit, building space stations and sending automated probes to the Moon to drive around and send soil samples back (some probes in the Luna series were sample-return spacecraft) rather than letting humans do those things. Never mind that a human can do so much more on-site than he can in a control room a light-second away...
So please, don't tell the guy to shut up -- do a little reading first. The attitude did indeed exist -- but from the Soviet leadership, not someone commenting on an Internet message board decades after the fact.
Re:Robots had another purpose (Score:5, Informative)
A lot of the moon-related exploration stuff was available to public - just visit the space museum in Moscow. Some parts of the exhibitions from the 1980s are, I believe, still there.
Re:Robots had another purpose (Score:3, Interesting)
> Instantly, Nedelin, his staff, their chairs, and over 100 technicians on the rocket were incinerated
Not entirely correct. There is black and white video footage of dozens of technicians running away from the fireball, all entirely aflame, before dropping to the ground.
It was only "instantly" for those right next to the rocket. Who knows how many burned alive over the course of a half minute or two.
http://www.russianspaceweb.com/r16_disaster.html [russianspaceweb.com]
Re:Robots had another purpose (Score:5, Informative)
How the cosmonauts really felt hasn't been addressed much if at all in any of the books or web sites I've read, nor have any documentaries.
Re:Robots had another purpose (Score:3, Interesting)
I believe I saw in the same documentary that the cosmonauts felt that the trip to the moon was a one-way trip due to the untested and underdesigned lunar module.
Re:Robots had another purpose (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Robots had another purpose (Score:4, Informative)
That was part of the problem, Korolev who designed the N1 died before the it could be test fired and Mishin who followed him was not in the same league.
N1 was only one of three designs of heavy launch rockets designed by the Soviets (they never designed a specific Moon rocket). It was chosen in preference to a design known as UR700 which would have been far simpler to construct and more reliable. The UR700's smaller brother became the highly successful Proton rocket which is still used and was at one point planned to launch a lunar manned orbiter.
But perhaps the most serious set-back that the Soviets had to face was that they never built a test stand for the N1 (Apollo built one in Mississippi), so the only way of determining its performance was to stack the rocket on the pad and fire the engines.
Four attempts, four different reasons for failure, but by then the N1 was so late that the propaganda advantage of manned missions to the Moon had been lost. The Politburo cancelled the programme just before the fifth launch attempt which the engineers believed would have succeeded.
Best wishes,
Mike.
Don't forget Luna 16 and 15 (Score:5, Informative)
ascent stage and retrieved a lunar soil sample
which it brought back to Earth in Sept. 1970
[wikipedia.org]
Luna 16
Also don't forget Luna 15. Just two hours
before the Apollo 11 Eagle was due to lift
off from the Moon, Luna 15 crash-landed
into the Moon's surface. It's job had been
to robotically retrieve soil samples which
could well have trumped Apollo 11 in doing so
and without risking human lives.
Those old of us to vividly remember the
Apollo 11 landing will also recollect the
drama surrounding Luna 15 right up until the
last moment.
Re:Robots had another purpose (Score:5, Informative)
I remember visiting the Science and Tech Museum here in Ottawa way back in 1977, the 60th anniversary of the USSR. The Soviets had an exhibition of their space program, including a model Vostok and Sputnik 1, some stuff about the recently completed Apollo/Soyuz joint mission...and a model Lunokhod, which ran on a little track on a grayish moon surface. Most interesting! Somewhere, I still have a brochure or two from it.
So this was hardly any sort of secret, the USSR being very solvent at the time.
Russia's first space rover (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Russia's first space rover (Score:5, Funny)
the most interesting thing about all of this is that they remodeled the rover for earthside use under the brand name lada [www.lada.ru].
That explained the suspension (Score:5, Funny)
Tested on the moon? This must explain the "bounce 20 feet in the air when you roll over a pebble" suspension.
Hmm (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Hmm (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Hmm (Score:5, Funny)
Kind of like the French and personal hygiene.
Re:Hmm (Score:3, Interesting)
Because we don't like it. Adults in America refuse to be forced to switch (road signs that listed both metric and imperial speed limits were used as target practice in some areas), and so long as the adults use the imperial system, children will grow up accustomed to it.
I personally would argue that for many human applications, the imperial system is better anyway. For example, temperatures in populated areas generally range from 0 (New England winter) to 100 (Los
So do the rest of us. (Score:3, Interesting)
Now go read some real history and find out why it really happened.
The US government is far from honest and open and just.
Re:So do the rest of us. (Score:5, Interesting)
Which author's/publisher's version do you accept as gospel? The one that says slavery? The one that says state's rights? They both have some truth in them.
I was taught in the public schools that Lincoln was trying to preserve the union. Abolishing slavery in the states in rebellion was a carefully considered wartime economic and political move that Jefferson Davis himself considered. Yes, it was hugely symbolic, but that doesn't mean it was *only* symbolic. The preservation of the union was the main thing as at that time in history England and France both had reasons for wanting us divided, weakened, and were really hoping for a divided union for obvious reasons.
I was also taught by my teachers that I would never learn everything in a few hours a day. That the teachers had enough time to cover only very monumental events and that it was the responsibility of ME AND MY PARENTS to make sure that I took the basic tools they gave us in school and go out in the world and read, question, and learn. And, to attempt to synthesize the various slanted historical perspectives before coming to my own conclusions.
Russian rovers! Bah! What monumental historical event should this displace in a curricula that can only cover a finite amount of material?
Stop blaming the system for everything they didn't teach you.
Thank a teacher that you've the wit to get in a flame war here on slashdot!
Re:So do the rest of us. (Score:3)
Re:Hmm how to learn perhaps? (Score:3, Insightful)
How about how to teach yourself?
Try reading, it works great. You can find these things called books at a place called a library.
In addition to teaching me how to use a library, my parents also bought a big pile of paper called an encyclopedia. The purchase includes yearly updates called yearbooks.
Then there's a yellow skinned magazine to which your parents or grandparents should have subscribed. It is call
how about smallpox? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:how about smallpox? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Hmm (Score:5, Insightful)
Finance for protection from unwise debt.
Scientifically-grounded health and fitness.
Now, Americans are both fat and floating in their own debt.
What's with teaching state history, when teaching the present and future values of a loan is so much much more important towards quenching the blind ambition of college-bound students. It's not like people learn much from history--at least they don't show it (citing all the presidential debates from now until November).
Re:Hmm (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Hmm (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Hmm (Score:5, Informative)
It completely ignores Valentina Tereshkova, a russian woman who was not only the first woman in space 20 years earlier (almost to the day, in June 1963) but was about the sixth person into space entirely (I may have that position slightly wrong)
Simple Explaination (Score:4, Funny)
That's because in Soviet Russia, moon rovers learn about YOU!
Sorry...couldn't resist.
Re:Simple Explaination (Score:3, Funny)
I had never heard of this feat. I asked around (friends and coworkers) and nobody else I've talked to has heard of them either.
That's because in Soviet Russia, moon rovers learn about YOU!
Sorry...couldn't resist.
Thats because Resistance is futile!
Not just a Google web search (Score:5, Informative)
candidly
What are they teaching in schools today? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:What are they teaching in schools today? (Score:4, Insightful)
"Thanks to my American Education?" (Score:5, Interesting)
Russian schools just as bad! (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Russian schools just as bad! (Score:5, Interesting)
1) The Soviets landed people on the moon;
2) The US moon landings were faked.
They learned it in school. I've even heard that from some of my in-laws there, and I'm far from sure I've convinced them it isn't true. Heck, some Americans even believe 2.
Wow. Another Russian First (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Wow. Another Russian First (Score:5, Funny)
popular children toy (Score:5, Informative)
by th way, Lunochod means Moonwalker
Ever wonder about the names? (Score:5, Interesting)
Russian-named features on the dark side (Score:5, Funny)
It really is true. I'm in the Western Hemisphere right now, and it is light out. It so happens that many of the features in the northern part of the dark side of the Earth at this time also have Russian names. Imagine that!
Re:Ever wonder about the names? (Score:3, Informative)
In fact, how would they operate the rovers if they were on the far side?
Re:Ever wonder about the names? (Score:3, Informative)
Features on the dark side of the moon are (nearly) invisible. There's no sunlight there. Nobody's ever spent much time there (even roboticly).
The far side of the moon, however, is another story. The Soviet Union was one of the pioneer explorers of that, and they took lots of pictures... during local daylight periods, of course.
Re:Ever wonder about the names? (Score:4, Insightful)
So of course nobody has spent much time their, just as nobody has spent much time in the Fairy Kingdom.
Come On... (Score:5, Informative)
I thought american schools were value free (Score:5, Insightful)
It reminds us that our history books stilled talked about manifest destiny in grand terms until the mid 70s and how the genocide of indigenous peoples in our own country was conveniently brushed aside at the same time. Politicians here love to criticize Japanese teachings about WWII, but this is a good reminder that us Americans should temper our supposed superiority from time to time.
Americans are from Mars, Soviets are from Venus (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Americans are from Mars, Soviets are from Venus (Score:5, Informative)
Imagine how much it sucked when, according to the site, two landers had their lens caps stuck, and a third one ejected its lens cap right where its probe arm was supposed to touch the ground!
Re:Americans are from Mars, Soviets are from Venus (Score:5, Informative)
Apollo Lunar Rovers (Score:3, Informative)
"U.S. astronauts drove three Lunar Rover Vehicles on the last three Apollo missions..."
We did learn about Lunokhod rovers in school (Score:5, Funny)
Don't be sad. Thanks to my soviet-era communist education, I was convinced in my school years that the Apollo maned missions to Moon are just an expenisve imperialist publicity stunt with no real scientific value.
Re:We did learn about Lunokhod rovers in school (Score:4, Funny)
And gee, they were almost right...
I'd like the poster to quit his whining. (Score:5, Insightful)
I knew that Russians had put rovers on the moon.
School's job is not to tell you everything that's ever happened. School's job is to give you the tools you need to find things out. I got those tools. You did not. The fact that we both got an "American" education is irrelevant.
Quit blaming your ignorance on your teachers. Start paying more attention to what they had to work with.
Re:I'd like the poster to quit his whining. (Score:3, Interesting)
My schools didn't give me the tools I needed to find things out. Luckily, I dropped out and started reading, which was a great boon once I got into college.
All I was taught about Russia in school was that their government was put in place without concern for the will of the people, their government spied on its own people, corruption was rampant, and a bunch of fat cats at the top lived
There's a Russian joke about it (Score:5, Funny)
Airport in Germany. Soviet and German leaders meet. As the Germans come to the Soviet airplane, Brezhnev comes out, sniffs everyone from the German delegation, picks up some dirt off the ground, puts it in his pocket and returns to the airplane.
Few minutes later a Russian scientist apologizes: "We messed up and instead of Presidential visit program loaded up Lunokhod program".
Re:There's a Russian joke about it (Score:3, Funny)
Another one (Score:5, Funny)
- In order to win the space race, you will land on the Sun!
- But we'll burn there, Leonid Il'ich!
- Don't worry, the Communist Party's Central Commettee is not stupid! You'll fly there in the night!
P.S. Anyone can translate the anecdote about Challenger and "zalpy saljuta"?
Yet another one (Score:4, Funny)
The President of the United States gets a call from Russia's Prime Minister, Mikhail Gorbachev:
- Hello, President?
- Yes?
- Please accept our sincere apologies for Challenger's explosion!
- But it's scheduled to launch in 40 seconds!
- Oh? Ok, we'll call back!
If you are in Kansas (Score:5, Informative)
Also sample return. (Score:3, Interesting)
The existence of the Lunokhods was certainly well-known at the time. Of course after the first couple of Apollo landings, the attention deficit disordered American public had pretty much lost interest even in humans walking on the Moon, so I guess it's no surprize that hardly anyone remembers the Lunokhods.
In that same time frame (between the two rover landings I think, but I could be wrong) the Russians also landed a vehicle that scooped up a sample of Lunar soil and returned it to Earth. A tiny fraction of what Apollo returned, of course, but significant in that it was from an area of the Moon that Apollo never visited.
"HOLY F*CKING SH*T, HOUSTON!!!" (Score:4, Funny)
His ass would be on monolith alert after that, no doubt!
Ping! (Score:4, Interesting)
Roverlords (Score:5, Funny)
I, for one, welcome our new Russian Roverlords.
information across the Iron Curtain (Score:4, Interesting)
I'm American, and I remember that probe (Score:3, Insightful)
It's not just in the USA (Score:5, Insightful)
The thing is, most of my classmates were not even interest in the whole subject, so for them Lunokhod or Appolo didn't meant anything. In the USA it's obvious that people have knowledge (or should have, it is after all a great thing to be prouf of) about their own space missions, but beyond that it's really down to curiosity and personal interest.
I would argue that most knowledge of this kind that people have is not directly derived from taking classes at school but it's a result of curiosity and self-reading. And perhaps rightly so.
Some Russian achievements (Score:5, Informative)
Ignorance isn't bliss. (Score:3, Interesting)
Let's place the blame where it belongs, with yourself. This is hardly something that was hidden from the public, it's always been there for anyone who cared to look. Was it as well known as the current crop of NASA rovers? No, but there wasn't an internet, etc to splash the latest images around the world in moments either. It has nothing to do with your education, but rather your lack of curiosity up until this moment.
On the subject of Russian space feats, they were also the first country to mount a specially designed machine gun to a satellite and fire it in space. For peacefull purposes only, of course..
Re:Ignorance isn't bliss. (Score:3, Interesting)
Well said. I found about these rovers when I was in grade school from reading science encyclopedias in the library. I remember it being described as looking like a Victorian bathtub [nasa.gov].
You can't learn about every space endeavour through school, you have to be curious enough to find out for yourself some things.
Speak for yourself (Score:3, Insightful)
Thanks to *my* American education.
If you really lament your education, I think you should speak to your parents about their lack of involvement, and to yourself about your lack of curiosity.
Why Lunokhod-2 died after 4 month (Score:5, Interesting)
Not only that but... (Score:5, Insightful)
The whole notion that the US "won the space race" is an interesting bit of spin. The fact is that the USSR notched up a very large number of firsts and could equally argue that they won the race if the finishing line hadn't been arbitraly decided to be a manned mission to the moon (and you can bet that it wasn't the Russians who decided that that was the only feat which mattered).
The US won the cold war over the USSR, or more to the point, outlasted the USSR, because the USSR ran out of money. Ultimately the Soviet system was a poor means of running a country, so they lost their super power status... but that hardly means they lost the space race.
As Napolean said: history is a lie made up by the victors.
Richard Garriott bought one of them (Score:3, Interesting)
The other Slashdot effect (Score:5, Funny)
The Wikipedia page has been slashdotted.
Under a list of protected pages [wikipedia.org], the Lunokhod program [wikipedia.org] page is listed because page was listed on a /. story 26 minutes ago, has already been vandalized half a dozen times including insertion of goatsex links. Pakaran. 23:06, 10 Feb 2004 (UTC)
Re:The other Slashdot effect (Score:5, Insightful)
Are slashdotters the univited people that smell weird and rifle through your stuff at parties?
Behave on other sites.
Beeing in the middle (Score:3, Interesting)
Well, i'm glad to be from Europe (Austria to be exact), because we were - as a neutral country - beeing subject to both western AND eastern brainwashing and so got information of both sides of the space race
Well, to get the truth to it: Science experiments of Austria have flown on both sides; we even got an astronaut (or Austronaut) to MIR, which is quite a feat for such a small country...
BTW, look at quite a nice Lunokhod picture [astronautix.com] and also see the US Ranger Program [nasa.gov] to get a better view of the real pressures in NASA's side of the space race.
Newsflash (Score:5, Funny)
Lets be Fair (Score:5, Insightful)
Deriding the American educational system for not having kids memorize every event in space history is a bit harsh. To be fair there is quite a bit of space history, and this feat while impressive was clearly not as impressive as walking on the moon, and came second. I also doubt there is some dark sinister nationalism at fault, as also seems to be hinted at.
Lets deride the American education system for failing to teach reading and math, not obscure space trivia.
An unused rover is here in the states (Score:5, Informative)
There is an unused Lunokhod rover here in the states. Here is a color picture I took [geocities.com] a few years ago. The rover is/was at the Kansas Cosmosphere [cosmo.org]. The Cosmosphere is a wonderful place, and well worth making a road trip.
The top of the rover popped open lengthwise to reveal the solar panels. The long nose looking thing on the front was the antenna. There are rumors that these rovers did sample returns even. Havn't seen any proof though.
Interesting tid-bit (Score:5, Interesting)
Here is an interesting tid-bit: to remotely drive the rovers, the russians selected people who did not have driver licences.
The idea was that they would not have driver's reflexes they would have to unlearn in order to drive a vehicle with a 1 second lag in response thanks to the Earth_Moon gap...
Re:11 months! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:11 months! (Score:5, Interesting)
Funny. I now work for an american corporation, and did work closely with NASA. And we indeed give a fuck about quaity control, economics, or long-term consequences. A very long, hard fuck.
But statistics is a stubbron thing. Russian space craft, from boosters to landers do have higher success rate. Go figure.
Re:11 months! (Score:4, Informative)
Get a clue. You desperately need it.
They did. It was started at the same time as US. While the US was from inception and till now intended as a manned system and requires 7 guinea pigs to fly (and die), the russian from inception was designed to run in fully automated mode if needed. It can also carry as many people as the US one, but it took off and landed automatically day one.
It went through a number of prototypes which were considerably smaller then the shuttle and can land on both sea and ground. There are publically available pictures taken from New Zeland destroyer of russians retrieving one of the prototypes after a water landing in the South Pacific in the late 70-es.
The program developement ended with the Buran which had the same spec as the shuttle and could still fly in fully automated mode (take off, dock, land). It completed one fully automatic space flight and landed successfully. On the second flight with crew on board the system malfunctioned at a similar time in the take off sequence like the Challenger. The main difference between the Challenger and Buran was the fact that the Buran had a working ejector system and the crew escaped unharmed. Which makes a remarkable difference compared to the shuttle. And it was not kept secret. It was in the news and well known.
After that incident the powers that be finally did an economical analysis of the program and found that it is completely unviable. The reason being that copying the shuttle was wrong. The shuttle was designed to satisfy several silly USAF requirements and as a result was and still is too big for our rocket technology. The early prototypes were right. We cannot build a reusable vehicle larger then about 30% of the shuttle and keep it reliable.
And the funniest bit is that one of the prototypes for the new NASA vehicle is a literal copy of these prototypes. Compare the Kiwi pictures of the real thing from the 70-es and the NASA material. Actually nothing funny - it is the reality. Same as with the Yak 142 technology making its way into the next generation of US VTL fighter jet, so on so forth. I would not go into why and what as it will be marked as a flamebait though they are well known as well.
Re:11 months! (Score:5, Interesting)
I remember the whispering propaganda of the 60's and 70's. "The soviets all use crapy electronics", "The soviets rockets all crash or explode", "The soviets are way behind the USA", etc. In reality, time has revealed that whatever their politics, the soviets showed great economy and resourcefullness (at a time many US rockets blew up, too but were less publicized) and succeded in many ways. That their information has been so overlooked rather underscores a propaganda war on the part of the USA (and make no mistake, since the day Kennedy launched the Space Program, there was a huge propaganda onslaught to make US look good, inspite of setbacks and disasters.)
I've never met an astronaut, but have met a cosmonaut, an intelligent and personable fellow, who was mercilessly grilled by a college professor on politics rather than the space programs.
Re:11 months! (Score:5, Insightful)
1) On several occasions, launches were made LONG before ready, for political reasons, risking lives (not that this is a soviet only thing)
2) US failures were less publicized? We had rockets blowing up on LIVE TELEVISION, whilst the world found out about russian flights after splashdown 1/2 the time. The failures we only know about (until recently) because we found massive craters from exploded rockets.
The entire space race was an exercise in propaganda, anyway.
Re:11 months! (Score:3, Informative)
A-4 rockets flew to the edge of space while flying from Germany and France to London, and in later years were modified by von Braun and the US Army for increased performance;
Re:WTFipedia... (Score:4, Funny)
From looking at the Wikipedia history, it appears that the GNAA poster is at 82-32-36-56.cable.ubr05.azte.blueyonder.co.uk (82.32.36.56). This is a Blueyonder cable subscriber in the UK. I am currently hacking their computer.
Re:Not just American education... (Score:3, Insightful)
Try these questions.
What was the name of the first American lander on the moon?
The name of the first lander on Mars?
What was then name of the first US communications sattilite?
Most people know little about space.
You *do* realize (Score:5, Funny)
not gravity, sun or nearness (Score:4, Informative)
the mars rovers are semi-autonomous (Score:3, Informative)
So the latest mars rovers are semi-autonomous. Mission control gives them a destination, and the rover finds its own way there.
Now the reason for the slow speed has a bit to do with control theory. One of the most accurate ones we've developed to date works like this: Plot a path to the destination using currently avai
Proverb (Score:3, Informative)