Lunokhod 201 After years of secret engineering development and training, the first Lunokhod (vehicle 8ЕЛ№201) was launched on February 19, 1969. Within a few seconds the rocket disintegrated and the first Lunokhod was lost. The rest of the world did not learn of the rocket's valuable payload until years later. The failure resulted in the radioactive heat source,
polonium 210, being spread over a large region of Russia.
Lunokhod 1 After the destruction of the original Lunokhod, Soviet engineers began work immediately on another lunar vehicle.
Lunokhod 1 (vehicle 8ЕЛ№203) was the first of two uncrewed lunar rovers successfully landed on the Moon by the Soviet Union as part of its Lunokhod programme. The spacecraft which carried
Lunokhod 1 was named
Luna 17.
Lunokhod 1 was the first roving remote-controlled robot to land on another world.
Luna 17 was launched on November 10, 1970 at 14:44:01 UTC. After reaching Earth
parking orbit, the final stage of
Luna 17s launching rocket fired to place it into a trajectory towards the Moon (November 10, 1970 at 14:54 UTC). After two course correction manoeuvres (on November 12 and 14) it entered lunar orbit on November 15, 1970 at 22:00 UTC. The spacecraft soft-landed on the Moon in the
Sea of Rains on November 17, 1970 at 03:47 UTC. The lander had dual ramps from which the payload,
Lunokhod 1, could descend to the surface. At 06:28 UT the rover moved down the ramps and onto the Moon. The rover's payload included cameras (two television and four panoramic telephotometers), a RIFMA
X-ray fluorescence spectrometer, an RT-1
X-ray telescope, a PrOP odometer/penetrometer, a RV-2N radiation detector, and a TL laser retroreflector. An urban legend was spread among the Soviet Union that the Lunokhod rover was driven by a “
KGB Dwarf”, however it was never explained how supplies were stored to keep them alive for an 11-month mission.
Lunokhod 2 Lunokhod 2 (vehicle 8ЕЛ№204) was the second and more advanced of the two Lunokhod rovers. The launcher put the spacecraft into Earth parking orbit on January 8, 1973, followed by a
translunar injection. On January 12, 1973,
Luna 21 was braked into a
lunar orbit. The
Luna 21 spacecraft landed on the Moon to deploy the second Soviet lunar rover,
Lunokhod 2. The primary objectives of the mission were to collect images of the lunar surface, examine ambient light levels to determine the feasibility of astronomical observations from the Moon, perform laser ranging experiments from Earth, observe solar X-rays, measure local magnetic fields, and study mechanical properties of the lunar surface material. The landing occurred on January 15, 1973 at 23:35 UT in
Le Monnier crater (25.85 degrees N, 30.45 degrees E). After landing the
Lunokhod 2 took television images of the surrounding area, then rolled down a ramp to the surface at 01:14 UT on 1973-01-16. It then took pictures of the
Luna 21 lander and landing site. The rover was equipped with three
slow-scan television cameras, one mounted high on the rover for navigation, which could return high resolution images at different rates—3.2, 5.7, 10.9 or 21.1 seconds per frame (not frames per second). These images were used by the five-man team of controllers on Earth who sent driving commands to the rover in real time. There were four panoramic cameras mounted on the rover. Scientific instruments included a
soil mechanics tester, solar X-ray experiment, an
astrophotometer to measure visible and
ultraviolet light levels, a
magnetometer deployed in front of the rover on the end of a 2.5
m (8 ft 2 in) boom, a
radiometer, a
photodetector (Rubin-1) for laser detection experiments, and a French-supplied laser
corner reflector.
Payload • Cameras (three television and four panoramic
telephotometers) • RIFMA-M
X-ray fluorescence spectrometer •
X-ray telescope • PROP
odometer/
penetrometer • RV-2N-LS
radiation detector • TL laser
retroreflector • AF-3L UV/visible
astrophotometer • SG-70A
magnetometer • Rubin 1
photodetector Lunokhod 3 Lunokhod 3 (vehicle 8ЕЛ№205) was built for a
Moon landing in 1977 as
Luna 25, but never flew to the Moon due to lack of launchers and funding. It remains at the NPO Lavochkin museum. ==Results==