The Earthtimes online News
Home

Russia, India sign joint lunar research deal

Posted : Mon, 12 Nov 2007 14:09:03 GMT
Author : Ria Novosti
Category : Space (Technology)
News Alerts by Email click here )
Create your own RSS
Space Technology News | Home
Moscow, Nov 12 (RIA Novosti) Russia's Federal Space Agency (Roskosmos) and India's Department of Space have signed a joint lunar research and exploration agreement, the Russian agency said Monday.

The agreement was signed by Roskosmos chief Anatoly Perminov and Madhavan Nair, secretary to India's Department of Space and chairman of the Space Commission.

The lunar research agreement has been signed during the ongoing official visit of Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh to Moscow.

Georgy Polishchuk, general director of Russia's Lavochkin Design Bureau, said Russia would launch an unmanned mission to the Moon, Luna-Glob, in 2010. The second mission, which will include putting a new-generation 400-kg Lunokhod unmanned rover on the Moon, will start in 2011.

'The first mission will be solely Russian, but the second will be carried out in conjunction with India,' Polishchuk said.

He said India will provide a rocket and a flight module for the mission, which will be launched from an Indian space centre.

The third and fourth stages (2012-2015) will include the study of mineral resources and other scientific and research experiments on the Moon.

Russia, a pioneer in robotic lunar research, abandoned its lunar exploration program with the end of the Moon race in the mid-1970s, but the idea of exploring the Earth's natural satellite has been revisited recently, due to ambitious international projects to develop the Moon's resources and to use it as a stepping-stone for further space exploration.

Roskosmos said earlier its first unmanned flight would include a lunar orbiter that will fire 12 penetrators over a wide area of the Moon to create a seismic network, which will be used to study the Moon's origin.

After firing the penetrators, the mother ship will deliver a polar station, equipped with a mass spectrometer and neutron spectrometer, to the surface.

The objective of the station is to detect water ice deposits in the polar zones of the Moon.

The device, developed by Russian scientists, will first be tested through NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter project, to be launched in 2008.


(c) Indo-Asian News Service


Article : Russia, India sign joint lunar research deal
Print this article
Email this article


Share on

Have your Say
Name
Email
Subject
Your Comment

Enter Verification code
 
  

 

 

More Space (Technology) News click here

Choose Theme
Green Earth Blue Earth Orange Earth Purple Earth

Search
 
You can
Print this articleemail this articleComment on this article

Current News

News Category
Business
Entertainment
Environment
General
Health
Sports
Technology
- Games
- Internet
- Science
- Space
World
Press Release

About us | News Archives | Browse old Archive | Feedback | Disclaimer | Mobile/PDA | News Alerts

The views expressed in the articles are not necessarily those of earthtimes.org and we accept no responsibility for the views or opinions
expressed in the articles either direct or indirect.

© 2008 www.earthtimes.org, The Earth Times, All Rights Reserved | Privacy Policy