Luna 12
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Organization: | Soviet Union |
Major Contractors: | GSMZ Lavochkin |
Mission Type: | Planetary Science Lunar Orbit |
Satellite of: | Moon |
Launch: | October 22, 1966 at 08:38:00 UTC |
Launch Vehicle: | Molniya 8K78M (4-Stage R-7 / SS-6) |
Mission Highlight: | Entered lunar orbit on October 25, 1966, 20:45 UTC |
Mission Duration: | 89-days. Last contact January 19, 1967 |
Mass: | 1,620 kg |
NSSDC ID: | 1966-094A |
Webpage: | NASA NSSDC Master Catalog |
Orbital elements | |
---|---|
Semimajor Axis: | 2,404.5 km |
Eccentricity: | .31 |
Inclination: | 10° |
Orbital Period: | 205 minutes |
Aposelene: | 2938 km |
Periselene: | 1871 km |
Orbits: | 602 |
Instruments | |
Imaging system : | Lunar photography |
Gamma-ray spectrometer : | |
Magnetometer : | |
Radiation detectors : | |
Infrared radiometer : | |
Meteoroid detector : | |
R-1 transmission experiment : |
Luna 12 (E-6LF series) was an unmanned space mission of the Luna program, also called Lunik 12. Luna 12 was launched towards the Moon from an Earth-orbiting platform and achieved lunar orbit on October 25, 1966. The spacecraft was equipped with a television system that obtained and transmitted photographs of the lunar surface. The photographs contained 1100 scan lines with a maximum resolution of 14.9-19.8 m. Pictures of the lunar surface were returned on October 27, 1966. The number of photographs is not known. Radio transmissions from Luna 12 ceased on January 19, 1967, after 602 lunar orbits and 302 radio transmissions.
Luna 12 was launched to complete the mission that Luna 11 had failed to accomplish—take high-resolution photos of the Moon’s surface from lunar orbit. Luna 12 successfully reached the Moon on 25 October 1966 and entered a 133 x 1,200-kilometer orbit. The Soviet press released the first photos taken of the surface on 29 October—pictures that showed the Sea of Rains and the Aristarchus crater. Resolution was as high as 15 to 20 meters. Film was developed, fixed, dried automatically, and scanned for transmission to Earth. No further photos were ever released. After completing its main imaging mission, Luna 12 was put into a spin-stabilized roll to carry out its scientific mission, which was fulfilled quite successfully. Contact was finally lost on 19 January 1967 after 302 communications sessions.
Preceded by Luna 11 |
Luna programme | Succeeded by Luna 13 |
Luna programme | ||||
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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