International Lunar Research Station

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International Lunar Research Station (ILRS)
Country of origin China, Russia
Responsible organization CNSA, Roscosmos
Program history
Program duration Reconnaissance: 2021–2025
Construction: 2026–2035
Utilization: from 2036

The International Lunar Research Station (ILRS) (Chinese: 国际月球科研站) is a planned lunar base currently being developed by Roscosmos and the China National Space Administration. The ILRS will serve as a comprehensive scientific experiment base built on the lunar surface or in lunar orbit that can carry out multi-disciplinary and multi-objective scientific research activities including exploration and utilization, lunar-based observation, basic scientific experiment and technical verification, and long-term autonomous operation. Statements from Roscosmos and CNSA underline that the project will be "open to all interested countries and international partners."[1][2][3][4]

History

On 16 June 2021, Roscosmos and the China National Space Administration (CNSA) held a joint session in St. Petersburg on the auspices of the Global Space Exploration Conference (GLEX 2021), dedicated to the presentation of the Roadmap for the creation of the International Lunar Research Station (ILRS). The session was attended by Sergei Saveliev, the Deputy Director General of Roscosmos for International Cooperation and Wu Yanhua, the Vice Administrator of CNSA (remotely).

Roscosmos and CNSA representatives held consultations on a draft declaration in September 2021, together with experts from Germany, France, Italy, the Netherlands, Malaysia, Thailand and the UN Office for Outer Space Affairs. The talks took place behind closed doors.[5]

Definition and composition

ILRS is a complex experimental research facility to be constructed with a possible attraction of partners on the surface and/or in the orbit of the Moon designed for multi-discipline and multi-purpose scientific research activities, including exploration and use of the Moon, Moon-based observation, fundamental research experiments, and technology verification with the capability of long-term unmanned operation with the prospect of subsequent human presence.[6]

Scientific objectives

  • Lunar topography, geomorphology, and geological structure
  • Lunar Physics and internal structure
  • Lunar Chemistry (materials and geoarchaeology)
  • Cis-Lunar space environment
  • Lunar-based astronomical observation
  • Lunar based Earth observation
  • Lunar-based biological and medical experiment
  • Lunar Resource in-situ utilization

Facilities

  • Cislunar Transportation Facility – supporting round-trip transfers between the Earth and the Moon, including lunar descent, landing, ascent, and return to Earth.
  • Long-term Support Facility on Lunar Surface – to consist of various support modules for operations on the lunar surface.
  • Lunar Transportation and Operation Facility – to consist of modules for lunar exploration and cargo transportation.
  • Lunar Scientific Facility – to support in-orbit and surface experiments
  • Ground Support and Application Facility – data center and ground support operations

Development

Phase 1: Reconnaissance (2021–2025)

Objectives:[6]

  • Lunar reconnaissance with the planned missions
  • ILRS design and selection of site(s)
  • Technology verification for a secure high-precision soft landing
List of missions (Includes Potential Missions of Other Partners)
Date Country (Agency) Launch Vehicle Spacecraft Image Status
7 December 2018 China China (CNSA) LM-3B Chang'e 4 128x128px Successful
22 August 2022 Russia Russia (Roscosmos) Soyuz-2 Luna 25 128px Planned
November 2024 Russia Russia (Roscosmos) Soyuz-2 Luna 26 128px Planned
2024 China China (CNSA) LM-5 Chang'e 6 Planned
2024 China China (CNSA) LM-5 Chang'e 7 Planned
August 2025 Russia Russia (Roscosmos) Soyuz-2 Luna 27 128px Planned

Phase 2: Construction (2026–2035)

Stage 1 (2026–2030):[6][7]

  • Technology verification for the command center of ILRS
  • Lunar sample return
  • Massive cargo delivery and secure high-precision soft landing
  • Start of joint operations

Stage 2 (2031–2035):[6][7]

  • Establishment of in-orbit and surface facilities for the ILRS, in preparation for crewed missions.
Phase Includes two normal missions and five Crucial Missions
Missions Objectives Date Country(Agency) Launch Vehicle Spacecraft Image Status
2027 China China (CNSA) LM-5 Chang'e 8 Planned
2027 Russia Russia (Roscosmos) Angara A5 Luna 28 Planned
5 crucial missions planned for comprehensive establishment of ILRS to complete the in-orbit and surface facilities between 2030 and 2035
ILRS-1 "Establishment of the command center, basic energy, and
telecommunication facilities, to satisfy the needs of lunar
infrastructure, lunar autonomous operations, and long-term
research exploration."[6]
2031 TBA LM-9 or Yenisei TBA Planned
ILRS-2 "Establishment of lunar research and exploration
facilities such as lunar physics, geological profiling,
lava tube exploration, lunar sample return."[6]
2032 TBA LM-9 or Yenisei TBA Planned
ILRS-3 "Establishment of lunar in-situ resources utilization
technology verification facilities."[6]
2033 TBA LM-9 or Yenisei TBA Planned
ILRS-4 "Verification of the general technologies for the lunar
biomedical experiment distributes sample collection
and return."[6]
2034 TBA LM-9 or Yenisei TBA Planned
ILRS-5 "Establishment of Lunar-based astronomy and earth
observation capabilities."[6]
2035 TBA LM-9 or Yenisei TBA Planned

Phase 3: Utilization (from 2036)

Objectives:[6]

  • Lunar research, exploration, and technology verification
  • Supporting crewed lunar missions with the completed ILRS
  • Expanding and maintaining modules as needed

See also

References

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