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#19 - RW 5-28-04 - RW Home
RIA Novosti
May 27, 2004
WILL MAN RETURN TO THE MOON BY 2015?
MOSCOW (Yury Zaitsev, expert, Space Research Institute, Russian Academy of
Sciences, for RIA Novosti)
After a long hiatus, the Moon is once again becoming the centre of attention
for many countries, including Russia, the USA and EU countries. And they are not
alone.
Japan, for example, wants to launch its Lunar-A and Selene lunar probes in
the spring- summer and summer-autumn of 2005. The latter will orbit the Moon,
studying the Earth's only natural satellite in minute detail and formulating
soft-landing technologies in safe areas with the help of autonomous navigation.
The Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) has also announced plans for
exploring the Moon. The 500kg Chandrayaan-1 inter-planetary probe is to be put
into lunar orbit primarily because India views the launch as a matter of
prestige and a way to highlight the country's impressive space-rocket potential.
In spring, Beijing hosted the first working conference dedicated to a lunar
orbital and remote-sensing mission during which the project's working bodies
were established and the managers were endorsed. The Chinese lunar mission will
be called Project Chang'e after the heroine of a Chinese legend who left the
Earth for the Moon. Project Chang'e will symbolise the determination of the
People's Republic of China to land on the Moon using modern space technology.
The Chinese project undoubtedly resembles some aspects of the manned Soviet
lunar mission that Soviet specialists analysed in the late 1960s and the early
1970s. Chinese experts have also made it clear that they want to establish a
permanent lunar base, which bears a great similarity to an Antarctic research
station, by the mid-2020s.
Beijing's plans have to a certain degree forced the United States' hand into
implementing its own lunar programme. In the 1960s, the Moon was a stumbling
block for the Soviet Union and the United States in the space race. Instead of
obtaining scientific results, manned lunar missions became a matter of national
prestige. After winning the race, the US today is in no mood to let any other
country relinquish its leading position in the flights to the Moon.
And what about Russia? The Moon has been criss-crossed by Soviet automatic
probes. A Soviet spacecraft sent back the first pictures showing the dark side
of the Moon, while a Lunnik probe also touched down on the Moon for the first
time. Moreover, the Soviets launched their Lunokhod (automatic lunar roving
vehicle) in the early 1970s. R&D institutes affiliated to the Russian Academy of
Sciences continue to study lunar-rock samples. The last ones were delivered to
the USSR in 1976, which marked an end to the Soviet lunar programme. The United
States, even though it arrived later than the USSR, had already left the Moon.
However, US astronauts did walk on the lunar surface.
In a recent speech, President George Bush announced an ambitious programme to
return to the Moon. As soon as the following day, Russian corporate managers,
who in the past were involved in the Soviet lunar programme, issued a statement
indicating that they were prepared to resume some mothballed projects. For
instance, Nikolai Moiseev, first deputy general director of the former Russian
Aerospace Agency (now the Federal Space Agency) said that a federal space
programme until 2015, which could reflect some of the old initiatives, would be
drafted by late 2004.
But what lies behind the resurgent interest in the Moon?
The Presidium of the Russian Academy of Sciences held a session in 1995,
where conference delegates noted that scientists had so far failed to comprehend
the Moon's origin and its inner structure. "Any additional information about the
origin of the Moon can help us find out more about the Earth's early history,"
Erik Galimov, full-time member of the Russian Academy of Sciences, said. "Human
activity and the terrestrial atmosphere have erased all traces of the first 600
million years of our planet's history, but all lunar rock has remained intact
since the Moon appeared and it is easy to study. Russia today has everything
necessary for this research."
The Moon has a virtually inexhaustible supply of the helium-3 isotope, which
is formed on the Sun's surface as a result of thermonuclear reactions and then
carried by solar winds all over the Solar System. Planetary atmospheres and
magnetic fields keep such isotopes in space, but as the Moon does not have any
atmosphere the particles reach its surface without any trouble, depositing
helium-3 just about everywhere. Particles of the isotope get stuck inside
regolite, the top lunar-rock layer. According to scientists, the Moon has
accumulated nearly 500 million tonnes of helium-3 over the millions of years and
while the Earth has no more than 500kg of helium-3, 70 kg can be obtained from
every square kilometre of the lunar surface. Helium-3 could completely replace
crude oil, natural gas, uranium and coal. When incinerated, 1kg of helium-3
generates 19 mWt of energy, which would be enough to light up Moscow for more
than six years. About 30 tonnes of helium-3 are needed to provide energy for the
entire planet for a year, scientists from the Geo-Chemistry and Analytical
Chemistry Institute (Russian Academy of Sciences) claim. It should also be
mentioned here that the price of nuclear electricity exceeds helium-3
transportation costs tens of times over.
Transport problems will have to be solved at this new stage of exploring and
developing the Moon. The Saturn-V space rocket, which was used in the Apollo
program, could place 45-tonne payloads into lunar trajectories. Unfortunately,
modern US rockets have a much smaller load-carrying capacity. Unmanned US Space
Shuttles are the simplest option. By removing all "smart" computer hardware and
software from the Atlantis, the Discovery and the Endeavor, it would become
possible to increase their load-carrying capacity (under 25 tonnes) by at least
12 tonnes. If they were overhauled, US Shuttles would be able to carry 100%
greater payloads; Russia's Buran (Snow Storm) shuttles could accomplish similar
objectives. However, this is only the first stage. The entire space-transport
system will have to be restructured completely.
Russian experts have designed a nuclear engine for a reusable lunar cargo
vehicle. One craft could deliver a 10 tonne payload to the Moon, which would
make it possible to set up a permanent lunar base for 10-20 people. Moreover,
these ships could deliver equipment for producing "lunar" oxygen and helium-3.
They would also be able to fly back helium-3 batches.
The Moon will evidently be conquered in several stages. Firstly, two
multi-purpose rovers should be sent there to choose the best base locations,
i.e. lunar poles that contain ice for water and which are illuminated by the Sun
round the clock. A lab operated by robots would then land on the Moon and
conduct comprehensive research and convert ice into water. The stage would,
therefore, be set for astronauts.
All these plans can be implemented within the next 5-10 years, so man might
well take another step on the Moon by 2015.
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