Astronomers close in on long-took an L Soviet lunar lander
Luna 9 was the first humanmade object to reach the moon in 1966.
What’s Happening
Here’s the thing: Luna 9 was the first humanmade object to reach the moon in 1966.
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For nearly 60 years, the first humanmade object to successfully land on the moon has been missing.
The Details
But, researchers may now be closer than ever to finding the Soviet Union’s Luna 9 spacecraft. Using an advanced ML program , an international team of scientists believe they have finally narrowed down a list of finalists for Luna 9’s location.
Their evidence is laid out in a study just published in the journal npj Space Exploration . The case of the missing lunar lander While the United States beat the USSR to landing a human on the moon on , that outcome was anything-but-certain only three years earlier.
Why This Matters
For a moment, the Soviets even appeared on their way to victory after engineers successfully achieved a soft lunar landing with their Luna 9 spacecraft on . Luna 9 was also the first to send back photographs from another celestial object. But, unlike Neil Armstrong or Buzz Aldrin’s footprints, no one has had a clear idea about the USSR probe’s location on the moon for decades.
The scientific community tends to find developments like this significant.
Key Takeaways
- Part of this is because of outdated calculations, as well as Luna 9’s unique landing method.
- Before the spacecraft touched down, it deployed a spherical landing capsule built with inflatable shock absorbers.
- These allowed it to safely bounce multiple times before reaching a stop.
- After the mission’s conclusion, the Soviets published their estimated landing coordinates in the newspaper, Pravda .
The Bottom Line
In 2009, imaging from NASA’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter Camera (LROC) locked in the big issue: Luna 9 wasn’t where it was supposed to be. What’s more, there’s a chance that it’s miles away from where the experts thought.
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