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Luna 20

Luna 20
Organization:Soviet Union
Major Contractors: GSMZ Lavochkin
Mission Type: Planetary Science
Lunar Sample Return
Satellite of: Moon
Launch: February 14, 1972 at
03:27:59 UTC
Launch Vehicle: Proton 8K82K + Blok D
Mission Highlight: 55-gram Lunar sample
returned to earth on
February 25, 1972,
19:19 UTC 40 km north of
Dzhezkazgan, Kazakhstan .
Mission Duration: 11-days
Mass: 5,727 kg
NSSDC ID: 1972-007A
Webpage: NASA NSSDC Master Catalog
Orbital elements
Semimajor Axis: 6,477.8 km
Eccentricity: 0
Inclination: 65°
Orbital Period: 119 minutes
Apogee: 100 km
Perigee: 100 km
Orbits: ~36
Lunar Landing: February 21, 1972,
19:19 UTC
Landing
coordinates:
3°32' N, - 56°33' E.
Lunar liftoff: February 22, 1972,
22:58 UTC
Instruments
Stereo imaging system : Lunar photography
Remote arm for sample collection : collect lunar material
Radiation detector : Lunar radiation environment

Luna 20 was an unmanned space mission of the Luna program, also called Lunik 20. Luna 20 was placed in an intermediate Earth parking orbit and from this orbit was sent towards the Moon. It entered lunar orbit on February 18, 1972. On February 21 1972, Luna 20 soft landed on the Moon in a mountainous area known as the Apollonius highlands near Mare Fecunditatis (Sea of Fertility), 120 km from where Luna 16 had impacted. While on the lunar surface, the panoramic television system was operated. Lunar samples were obtained by means of an extendable drilling apparatus. The ascent stage of Luna 20 was launched from the lunar surface on 22 February 1972 carrying 30 grams of collected lunar samples in a sealed capsule. It landed in the Soviet Union on 25 February 1972. The lunar samples were recovered the following day.

This was the eighth Soviet spacecraft launched to return lunar soil to Earth. It was evidently sent to complete the mission that Luna 18 had failed to accomplish. After a 4.5- day flight to the Moon, which included a single midcourse correction on 15 February, Luna 20 entered orbit around the Moon on 18 February. Initial orbital parameters were 100 x 100 kilometers at 65° inclination. Three days later, at 19:13 UT, the spacecraft fired its main engine for 267 seconds to begin descent to the lunar surface. A second firing further reduced velocity before Luna 20 set down safely on the Moon at 19:19 UT on 21 February 1972 at coordinates 3°32' north latitude and 56°33' east longitude, only 1.8 kilometers from the crash site of Luna 18. After collecting a small sample of lunar soil, the spacecraft’s ascent stage lifted off at 22:58 UT on 22 February and quickly accelerated to 2.7 kilometers per second velocity—sufficient to return to Earth. The small spherical capsule eventually parachuted down safely on an island in the Karkingir River, 40 kilometers north of the town of Dzhezkazgan in Kazakhstan, at 19:19 UT on 25 February 1972. The 55-gram soil sample differed from that collected by Luna 16 in that the majority (50 to 60 percent) of the rock particles in the newer sample were ancient anorthosite (which consists largely of feldspar) rather than the basalt of the earlier one (which contained about 1 to 2 percent of anorthosite). Like the Luna 16 soil, samples of the Luna 20 collection were shared with American and French scientists.

  • Launch Date/Time: 1972-02-14 at 03:27:59 UTC
  • On-orbit dry mass: 5600 kg


Preceded by :
Luna 19
Luna program Followed by :
Luna 21
03-10-2013 05:06:04
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