
As noted in an earlier post, India left for the moon’s south pole last week, but it won’t be alone for long. Russia is planning to launch its Luna-25 spacecraft, also called the Luna-Glob-Lander, next month. According to NASA, the mission has two primary scientific objectives at the Moon’s south pole:
- to study composition of the polar regolith, and
- to study the plasma and dust components of the lunar polar exosphere.
The last Luna mission was Luna-24 back in 1976 and involved the return of lunar samples to Earth.
The European Space Agency was planning to be part of this latest mission until the invasion of Ukraine, so Russia is on its own now.
I imagine simpler missions like this will be necessary if Russia plans to eventually build a moon base, though finding a partner may be tough. It is clear that the US and Russia are no longer in a neck-to-neck race back to the Moon. Only China seems to have the stamina to compete with NASA’s Artemis program, though the US is still in the lead for now.
The Luna-25 launch is planned for August 10 if all goes well.