Luna 26 Explained

Luna 26
Names List:Luna-Resurs-Orbiter
Luna-Resurs O
Mission Type:Lunar orbiter, data relay
Operator:Roscosmos
Spacecraft Type:Luna
Launch Date:2027 (planned)[1]
Launch Rocket:Soyuz-2.1b / Fregat
Launch Site:Vostochny Site 1S
Launch Contractor:Roscosmos
Orbit Reference:Selenocentric orbit
Orbit Regime:Polar orbit
Orbit Periapsis:80 km
Orbit Apoapsis:50 km
Apsis:selene
Interplanetary:
Type:Orbiter
Insignia Size:200px
Programme:Luna-Glob programme
Previous Mission:Luna 25
Next Mission:Luna 27

Luna 26 (Luna-Resurs-Orbiter[2] or Luna-Resurs O) is a planned lunar polar orbiter, part of the Luna-Glob program, by Roscosmos. In addition to its scientific role, the Luna 26 orbiter would also function as a telecomm relay between Earth and Russian landed assets.[3] This mission was announced in November 2014, and its launch is planned for 2027 on a Soyuz-2.1b launch vehicle.[1]

Overview

The Luna 26 orbiter mission has been in planning since at least 2011.[3] Originally it was envisioned to be launched to the Moon together with the lunar lander Luna 27 which will land on the South Pole–Aitken basin, an unexplored area on the far side of the Moon,[4] [5] [6] but because of mass limitations, they will be launched separately.[3] The orbiter's mass is about 2100 kg.[3]

The objective of the orbiter is to locate and quantify natural lunar resources that can be exploited by future landed missions.[7] After completion of its primary mission, the spacecraft's orbit will be raised to about 500 km altitude to study cosmic rays.[2]

International collaboration

The European Space Agency (ESA) had intended to contribute to this and other Luna-Glob missions in the manner of communications, precision landing, hazard avoidance, drilling, sampling, sample analysis and ground support.[8] [9] ESA cooperation with Russia on Luna 26 was discontinued on 13 April 2022 as a consequence of the Russian invasion of Ukraine.[10]

As of October 2017, the U.S. space agency NASA was negotiating and assessing a potential collaboration with the Luna-Glob missions Luna 25 through Luna 28.[11]

In September 2019, the China National Space Administration (CNSA) and Roscosmos signed two agreements on scientific cooperation and coordination between Luna 26 and the upcoming Chang'e 7 lunar polar orbiter.[12]

Scientific payload

The scientific payload on board the orbiter is composed of fourteen instruments[3] that will be fabricated by Russia and by some European partners.[3] The payload will study the lunar surface and the environment around the Moon, including the solar wind, and high-energy cosmic rays.[3] The orbiter may carry some NASA instruments, or instruments from private U.S. companies.[11] Luna 26 will also scout landing sites for the planned Luna 27 lander mission.[13]

Fate

Following the failure of the Luna 25 mission, the fate of the Luna 26 orbiter has been put into question.[14] Due to the entire Roscosmos leadership team from Luna 25 being replaced, the Luna 26 mission is likely to continue as planned so that the new leadership team can get experience with a Lunar orbiter before attempting another landing with Luna 27.[15] However, there is still a chance that Luna 26 as it exists is scrapped in favor of another attempt at the Luna 25 lander. Regardless, the loss of Luna 25 will delay the Luna 26 mission in whatever form it takes.[16]

See also

Notes and References

  1. News: Launch dates for Luna-26 and Luna-27 will be specified based on the results of the release of technical projects (translated). 27 February 2023. 10 March 2023. TASS.
  2. http://www.iki.rssi.ru/eng/moon.htm Russian Moon exploration program
  3. http://www.russianspaceweb.com/luna_glob_orbiter.html Luna-Glob Orbiter (Luna-Glob 2/Luna 26
  4. News: Ghosh. Pallab. Europe and Russia mission to assess Moon settlement. BBC News. 16 October 2015. 2015-10-16.
  5. Web site: ESA's plans for Lunar Exploration. European Space Agency (ESA). 2014. 2015-10-18.
  6. Web site: Russia-ESA Lunar Exploration Cooperation: Luna Mission Speed Dating. European Space Agency (ESA). 17 February 2014. 2015-10-18.
  7. https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Sergey_Krasilnikov/publication/320471564_Sources_of_materials_at_the_three_high-priority_landing_sites_of_the_Luna-Glob_mission/links/59e763ac0f7e9bed362beb26/Sources-of-materials-at-the-three-high-priority-landing-sites-of-the-Luna-Glob-mission.pdf Sources of materials at the three high-priority landing sites of the Luna-Glob mission
  8. https://web.archive.org/web/20160817211038/http://lunarvolatiles.nasa.gov/current-activities/ Exploring and Using Lunar Polar Volatiles
  9. http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2014EGUGA..16.6696M "Luna-Glob" and "Luna-Resurs": science goals, payload and status
  10. Redirecting ESA programmes in response to geopolitical crisis . . 13 April 2022 . 16 April 2022.
  11. Web site: Foust. Jeff. NASA studying potential cooperation on Russian lunar science missions . SpaceNews. 13 October 2017. 17 September 2019.
  12. Web site: Russia, China agree on joint Moon exploration. TASS. 17 September 2019. 17 September 2019.
  13. https://search.proquest.com/openview/4c044642c36b74f9367296d892c5a5f9/1?pq-origsite=gscholar&cbl=40798 The "Simplest Satellite" That Opened up the Universe
  14. Web site: Russia lunar ambitions soar despite Luna-25 setback: Luna-26, Luna-27 missions in focus . . 29 August 2023.
  15. Web site: Katin . P. . Looking past Luna 25's lunar landing failure: what's next? . NASASpaceFlight.com. 20 August 2023 .
  16. O'Callaghan . Jonathan . Russian Moon lander crash — what happened, and what's next? . . 2023 . 10.1038/d41586-023-02659-6 . 37604864 . 261063736 . 29 August 2023.