Luna 22

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Luna 22
Mission type Lunar orbiter
COSPAR ID 1974-037A
Mission duration ~521 days
Spacecraft properties
Spacecraft type E-8-LS
Manufacturer GSMZ Lavochkin
Launch mass 5,700 kilograms (12,600 lb)
Start of mission
Launch date 29 May 1974, 08:57:00 (1974-05-29UTC08:57Z) UTC
Rocket Proton-K/D
Launch site Baikonur 81/24
End of mission
Deactivated November 1975 (1975-12)
Orbital parameters
Reference system Selenocentric
Semi-major axis 6,598.3 kilometres (4,100.0 mi)
Eccentricity 0.18
Periselene 219 kilometres (136 mi)
Aposelene 222 kilometres (138 mi)
Inclination 19.35 degrees
Period 130 minutes
Lunar orbiter
Orbital insertion 2 June 1974
Orbits ~3,875

Luna 22 (Ye-8-LS series) was an unmanned space mission, part of the Soviet Luna program, also called Lunik 22.

Luna 22 was a lunar orbiter mission. The spacecraft carried imaging cameras and also had the objectives of studying the Moon's magnetic field, surface gamma ray emissions and composition of lunar surface rocks, and the gravitational field, as well as micrometeorites and cosmic rays. Luna 22 was launched into Earth parking orbit and then to the Moon. It was inserted into a circular lunar orbit on 2 June 1974. The spacecraft made many orbit adjustments over its 18 month lifetime in order to optimize the operation of various experiments, lowering the perilune to as little as 25 km. Maneuvering fuel was exhausted on 2 September and the mission was ended in early November.

Luna 22 was the second of two "advanced" lunar orbiters (the first being Luna 19) designed to conduct extensive scientific surveys from orbit. Launched about a year after the termination of Lunokhod 2 operations on the lunar surface, Luna 20 performed a single mid-course correction en route the Moon on 30 May before entering lunar orbit on 2 June 1974. Initial orbital parameters were 219 × 222 kilometers at 19°35' inclination. In addition to its primary mission of surface photography, Luna 22 also performed investigations to determine the chemical composition of the lunar surface, recorded meteoroid activity, searched for a lunar magnetic field, measured solar and cosmic radiation flux, and continued studies of the irregular magnetic field. Through various orbital changes, Luna 22 performed without any problems and continued to return photos fifteen months into the mission, although its primary mission had ended by 2 April 1975. The spacecraft's maneuvering propellant was finally depleted on 2 September, and the highly successful mission was formally terminated in early November 1975.

Luna 22 as of November, 2011, is the last Soviet or Russian lunar orbiter.[citation needed]

  • Launch Date/Time: 1974-05-29 at 08:57:00 UTC
  • On-orbit dry mass: 4000 kg

See also

External links


Preceded by Luna programme Succeeded by
Luna 23