Slashdot is powered by your submissions, so send in your scoop

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Moon

Russia Hopes For Its First Successful Lunar Landing Mission in Nearly 50 Years (theguardian.com) 143

Russia hopes to launch its first successful lunar landing mission for nearly 50 years, with a long-delayed takeoff from the far east of the country scheduled for early on Friday morning that the Kremlin aims to tout as a new achievement in space exploration. From a report: The Luna-25 mission will seek to land near the south pole of the moon, collecting geological samples from the area, and sending back data for signs of water or its building blocks, which could raise the possibility of a future human colony on the moon. But the more immediate goal is to prove that Russia still can launch a lunar landing mission after numerous failures in the past, generations of turnover among its scientific experts, delays due to sanctions and now isolation due to its war in Ukraine.

Post-Soviet Russia has launched two failed space landing missions, the Mars-96 in 1996 and Phobos-Grunt in 2011, both of which crash-landed into the Pacific Ocean. "The Russian Federation hasn't had much luck with launching unmanned interplanetary probes," said Vitaly Egorov, a blogger who writes extensively on space exploration. "Now 12 years later they're launching Luna-25 and the main intrigue is whether or not it will succeed in reaching [the moon] or not, and if it does, can it actually land there? "One of the main goals is to let modern specialists put down space probes softly on celestial objects. They haven't had that experience in 47 years. That knowledge needs to be restored for new specialists on a new technological level."

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Russia Hopes For Its First Successful Lunar Landing Mission in Nearly 50 Years

Comments Filter:
  • by Bolkar ( 939958 ) on Thursday August 10, 2023 @12:33PM (#63756444)
    God speed to the bottom of the ocean...
    • This is perhaps the first time in my life I've wished for a space mission to fail.

      Russia can go fuck itself while it's busy raping Ukraine and destabilizing the world's food supplies. There are no excuses for what they've done - only transparent lies and propaganda. And anyone who is ignorant or dishonest enough to swallow Putin's spooge can go fuck themselves as well for being part of the problem.

  • by Baron_Yam ( 643147 ) on Thursday August 10, 2023 @12:48PM (#63756506)

    Science can survive the loss of this mission, so for propaganda's sake I hope it fails miserably... While bleeding Russia's resources to impair their invasion of Ukraine.

    • by XXongo ( 3986865 )

      Science can survive the loss of this mission, so for propaganda's sake I hope it fails miserably...

      To the contrary, I'd like to see more of Russia's effort and resources going toward stuff like this, instead of showing off their military by invading neighboring countries.

      While bleeding Russia's resources to impair their invasion of Ukraine.

    • Yeah normally I cheer for any country launching a space mission but I make an exception for this one.

    • TAKE THAT PUTLER!

  • by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Thursday August 10, 2023 @12:56PM (#63756544)

    From a 3 days war that's heading into its 3rd year?

    • Apparently, those US sanctions haven't exactly "crippled" their economy like we thought they would.

      If they can still launch rockets into space, the Russians are doing better than expected.

      • Saying they're going to do something and pulling it off without ball bearings are different things.
      • Russia is broke. Until recently it tried to prop up the Ruble by buying foreign currency, that ended recently. The Ruble is now at 1:100 with the USD. And falling. Dramatically [xe.com].

        • by rogoshen1 ( 2922505 ) on Thursday August 10, 2023 @03:02PM (#63756948)

          the US has a 32t deficit. We're quite literally living on credit; calling Russia broke is slightly disingenuous.
          Now, It might involve talking with those subhuman swine that you would probably like to see genocided -- but ask a Russian how much the sanctions actually hurt them, and you might be surprised.

          Meanwhile food/energy prices in the US and Europe, how have those fared since the sanctions?

          • Credit towards whom? If you borrowed money from your own citizen you didn't really get any poorer.

          • The one I talked with said everyone that could afford to fled the country so they don't end up pushing sunflowers in Ukraine and that everything is in shambles and good luck buying any technological device. Food was still fine between panic buys cleaning the stores out and intervals. I doubt everyone would have stood aside and let Wagner drive to Moscow if they were having a good time over there.
          • It's easy to pump money into the population and subsidize certain goods like gas and power. Some European countries with populist governments do the same, mostly Hungary and Poland. Prop up the expenses your population has so they don't complain... but that means living on borrowed time. And money. Because sooner or later you have to pay the price.

            And I doubt that they can.

          • This is simply not how national economies work.

            Stop using household analogies. Your children do not pay you taxes.

      • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

        by hdyoung ( 5182939 )
        Oh, it’s well known that Russia has build a pretty successful “fortress economy”. They can hold out for centuries in isolation.

        But, regarding this moon-thing, the Russians have a long history of announcing things that never happen. They haven’t landed anything on the moon recently, and I wouldn’t bet on their success this time around. Their scientific establishment is completely wrecked and their engineering expertise isn’t looking particularly good either.

        And b
        • by deKernel ( 65640 )

          And you do realize that the left-winger in the Presidential office has done just as much as others to force the isolation right? You started to make some good points, but you lost serious credibility when you started to use such foolish and polarizing terms.

          • I’m not a fan of Biden’s “America first” policies because theyre likely to backfire. But it’s the rightwingers that carry most of the torch on the isolationist, furiner-hating, seal-our-borders, we-hate-everyone-unlike-us philosophy. Do you seriously think that Biden’s isolationist tendencies are anywhere near as bad as the Trump-Carlson-Jones bunch?
          • LOL, you think that a Democrat in America is a Left-winger?

            fuckin rubes

      • by lsllll ( 830002 )
        Sanctions only hurt the ordinary people. Those in power will always have/get what they want, including government programs. Plus you can't impose sanctions if half the world (cough, China for example) doesn't support your sanctions.
      • by larwe ( 858929 )

        If they can still launch rockets into space, the Russians are doing better than expected.

        I have rockets in my garage that I bought five years ago and I'm sure they'll go up if I light the fuse. Similarly, Russia has a lot of aerospace hardware built prior to the war, which probably mostly works 60% of the time. You don't plan and execute a lunar lander mission in a moment - this activity must have been kicked off _years_ ago and has been largely unaffected by the sanctions because all the required hardware was bought before they were instituted. And all the people who are getting paid to finish

  • by TJHook3r ( 4699685 ) on Thursday August 10, 2023 @01:10PM (#63756610)
    I'll chip in some money for a yellow and blue flag to plant up there
  • Good luck with that Russia. Lol.

  • They prefer "Special operation".
  • and random apartment buildings, so their missile targeting software might not be up to it.
  • Old hat (Score:2, Insightful)

    by backslashdot ( 95548 )

    They made it old hat, 50 years ago. Today we need a lunar base. Not a pussy ass lunar gateway shit, but a real god damn bona fide eat-a-fat-dick level certified moon base.

    • by gtall ( 79522 )

      I give up. Why do we need a lunar base? The views? All the minerals that are too expensive to ship back to Earth? A way station before we send Elon on his way?

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      A lunar base is mostly interesting as a prototype for a Mars base. There isn't that much interesting stuff on the Moon, and because the nights are so long it's not really worth being down there for more than a couple of weeks at a time.

      It's a very difficult environment too. Unlike Mars where there is weather, on the Moon there is nothing to wear down the regolith. It remains extremely sharp and rapidly destroys equipment, including space suits and rovers. Even the light is extremely harsh due to there being

  • by edi_guy ( 2225738 ) on Thursday August 10, 2023 @01:37PM (#63756698)

    Isn't the Indian launched Chandrayaan-3 doing the exact same thing? Maybe a bit better since their lander has wheels.

    "The mission is scheduled just shortly after the launch of India’s Chandrayaan-3 space probe, which entered the moon’s orbit earlier this week, according to the Indian Space Research Organization. The probe includes a lander and rover, which will also explore the water-rich area near the south pole of the moon."

    It would be nice to have the Indian one succeed and then have the rover drive over an inspect the wreckage of the failed Russian one

  • i hope it mysteriously crashes into the sea before it gets out of earth's atmosphere, fuck Russia after they stole Crimea and Invaded Ukraine i have no good will towards Russia anymore
  • They have run out of places to put all of the dissidents to Putin's failed 'Special Operation', so they are going to throw a few of them in this 'lander'. You can only throw so many out windows before you start running out of replacement windows.
  • Launching from the far east of russia because it's out of range of ukrainian drones...

  • Problem is, when you have not done it in some time, esp when nearly all work was done by humans, it will be problematic.

Think of it! With VLSI we can pack 100 ENIACs in 1 sq. cm.!

Working...