Russia on Thursday launched its first mission to the moon in nearly five decades, pitting it in a space race with India, which also has a clear aspiration to land a lunar craft this month.
The Luna-25 spacecraft was launched to the moon on Friday, marking Russia’s first solo mission since 1976 when it was part of the Soviet Union. The launch was conducted without the assistance of the European Space Agency, which ended cooperation with Russia following its invasion of Ukraine.
Africa Today News, New York reports that the launch from the Vostochny Cosmodrome in the Far East took place at 2:10am Moscow time Friday (23:10 GMT Thursday), according to live images broadcast by the Russian space agency Roscosmos.
The four-legged lander weighs approximately 800kg (1,750 pounds) and is due to reach lunar orbit in five days.
It will then spend between three and seven days choosing the right spot before landing in the lunar south pole area.
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‘For the first time in history, the lunar landing will take place on the lunar south pole. Until now, everyone has been landing in the equatorial zone,’ senior Roscosmos official Alexander Blokhin said in a recent interview.
The lander is expected to reach the moon’s surface on August 23, around the same time as an Indian craft, which was launched on the 14th of July.
Both countries’ lunar modules are headed for the unexplored south pole of the moon, a region where no spacecraft has ever landed successfully.
Africa Today News, New York reports that to date, only three governments have managed to achieve a successful moon landing: the Soviet Union, the United States, and China.
Roscosmos said the module would operate for one year and ‘take and analyse soil samples and conduct long-term scientific research’ on lunar surface material and the atmosphere.
It said it wants to show Russia ‘is a state capable of delivering a payload to the moon’, and ‘ensure Russia’s guaranteed access to the moon’s surface’.
Sanctions imposed on Russia after it invaded Ukraine make it harder for it to access Western technology, impacting its space programme. The Luna-25 was initially meant to carry a small moon rover, but that idea was abandoned to reduce the weight of the craft for improved reliability, analysts said.
‘Foreign electronics are lighter, domestic electronics are heavier,’ Vitaliy Egorov, a popular Russian space analyst, said. ‘While scientists might have the task of studying lunar water, for Roscosmos, the main task is simply to land on the moon, to recover lost Soviet expertise and learn how to perform this task in a new era.’
Journalist Daniel Hawkins said that, for Russia, the mission was a ‘big comeback to major space missions after quite a long break’.
‘Everyone is well aware of the tremendous Soviet legacy in terms of space launches,’ Hawkins told reporters, speaking from Moscow.
‘After the Soviet Union collapsed and sent the last probe to the moon back in 1976, the Russian space institute really went into a period of decline,’ he said.
For Russia, a successful mission to the Moon would show that despite its turbulent past and the Western sanctions, which have “really impacted Russia’s space development”, the country is capable of conducting major space missions, Hawkins said.
It would show that it can do so with “equipment that is effectively made in Russia – Russia’s own brand – to compete at an international level”, he said.
Russia’s most recent space landing missions in 2016 and 2011 ended up failing