Updated
Updated · spacedaily.com · Jul 16
Two Teams Claim Luna 9 Find 60 Years On as Chandrayaan-2 Awaits Confirmation
Updated
Updated · spacedaily.com · Jul 16

Two Teams Claim Luna 9 Find 60 Years On as Chandrayaan-2 Awaits Confirmation

3 articles · Updated · spacedaily.com · Jul 16

Summary

  • Two independent searches say they have probably located the Soviet Luna 9 lander in NASA lunar imagery, potentially ending a 60-year mystery over the first spacecraft to survive a landing on another world.
  • The rival sites are more than a dozen miles apart: Vitaly Egorov matched 1966 panorama terrain by hand, while a UCL team led by Lewis Pinault used a machine-learning system trained on Apollo landing signatures.
  • Chandrayaan-2, orbiting the Moon since 2019, is expected to break the tie with imagery sharp enough to show Luna 9’s central sphere and four petals on a pass this year.
  • Neither candidate fully satisfies cartographer Philip Stooke’s checklist of five hardware pieces plus a thruster-blast mark, though he has said Egorov’s site looks slightly more plausible.
  • Luna 9 transmitted four panoramas over three days in February 1966, proving the Moon’s surface could bear weight; its exact location now also matters as a 60-year materials-exposure experiment.

Insights

Has India’s orbiter finally pinpointed the lost Soviet Luna 9, solving a 60-year lunar mystery?
How does an Indian orbiter solving a Soviet mystery redefine the modern-day space race on the Moon?
What can a 60-year-old Soviet lander reveal about surviving the Moon's harsh environment for future missions?