Luna 23

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Luna 23
Luna 23
Organization: Soviet Union
Major Contractors: GSMZ Lavochkin
Mission Type: Planetary Science
Lunar Sample Return
Satellite of: Moon
Launch: October 28, 1974 at
14:30:32 UTC
Launch Vehicle: Proton 8K82K + Blok D
Mission Highlight: Landed on moon
November 6, 1974
at ~12° N - ~62° E.
Failed to return sample.
Mission Duration: 12-days November 9, 1974
Mass: 5,800 kg
NSSDC ID: 1974-084A
Webpage: NASA NSSDC Master Catalog
Orbital elements
Semimajor Axis: 6,476.8 km
Eccentricity:  ?
Inclination: 138°
Orbital Period: ~119 minutes
Apogee: 104 km
Perigee: 94 km
Orbits: ~48
Entered Lunar orbit: November 2, 1974
Lunar Landing: November 6, 1974
Landing
coordinates:
~12° N - ~62° E.
Instruments
Stereo imaging system : Lunar photography
Improved drill/arm sample collector : collect lunar material
Radiation detector : Lunar radiation environment
Radio-altimeter :

Luna 23 (Ye-8-5M series) was an unmanned space mission of the Luna program, also called Lunnik 23. Luna 23 was a Moon lander mission which was intended to return a lunar sample to Earth. Launched to the Moon by a Proton SL-12/D-1-e booster, the spacecraft was damaged during landing in Mare Crisium (Sea of Crises). The sample collecting apparatus could not operate and no samples were returned. The lander continued transmissions for 3 days after landing. In 1976, Luna 24 landed several hundred meters away and successfully returned samples.

Luna 23 was the first modified lunar sample return spacecraft, designed to return a deep core sample of the Moon’s surface (hence the change in index from Ye-8-5 to Ye-8-5M). While Luna 16 and 20 had returned samples from a depth of 0.3 meters, the new spacecraft was designed to dig to 2.5 meters. After a midcourse correction on 31 October, Luna 23 entered orbit around the Moon on 2 November 1974. Parameters were 104 x 94 kilometers at 138° inclination. Following several more changes to the orbit, the spacecraft descended to the lunar surface on 6 November and landed in the southernmost portion of Mare Crisium. Landing coordinates were 13° north latitude and 62° east longitude. During landing in “unfavorable” terrain, the lander’s drilling device was evidently damaged, preventing fulfillment of the primary mission, the return of lunar soil to Earth. Scientists devised a makeshift plan to conduct a limited science exploration program with the stationary lander. Controllers maintained contact with the spacecraft until 9 November 1974.

  • Launch Date/Time: 1974-10-28 at 14:30:32 UTC
  • On-orbit dry mass: 5600 kg


Preceded by:
Luna 22
Luna programme Succeeded by:
Luna 1975A


 

Luna programme
Luna lander bus
Luna 1958A | Luna 1958B | Luna 1958C | Luna 1 | Luna 1959A | Luna 2 | Luna 3 | Luna 1960A | Luna 1960B | Sputnik 25 | Luna 1963B | Luna 4 | Luna 1964A | Luna 1964B | Cosmos 60 | Luna 1965A | Luna 5 | Luna 6 | Luna 7 | Luna 8 | Luna 9 | Cosmos 111 | Luna 10 | Luna 1966A | Luna 11 | Luna 12 | Luna 13 | Luna 1968A | Luna 14 | Luna 1969A | Luna 1969B | Luna 1969C | Luna 15 | Cosmos 300 | Cosmos 305 | Luna 1970A | Luna 1970B | Luna 16 | Luna 17 | Luna 18 | Luna 19 | Luna 20 | Luna 21 | Luna 22 | Luna 23 | Luna 1975A | Luna 24

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