Skip to main content

NASA’s lunar orbiter captures image of Russian spacecraft crash site

NASA’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) has located what’s believed to be the crash site of Russia’s failed Luna-25 mission.

Russia was hoping to become the first nation to perform a successful soft landing near the moon’s South Pole with its uncrewed Luna-25 spacecraft, but the mission failed in the final moments in August 2023, causing the vehicle to slam into the ground at high speed.

Recommended Videos

Following the crash, NASA’s Russian counterpart, Roscosmos, shared an estimated location of the impact point. The LRO team used the data to design a set of search commands for its orbiter, which then located and photographed the point of interest.

Please enable Javascript to view this content

The LRO team compared the new images with others taken before the impact and immediately spotted a new crater.

The likely impact site of the Luna-25 spacecraft.
The likely impact site of the Luna-25 spacecraft. NASA
An image of the crash site taken prior to the impact.
An image of the likely crash site taken prior to the impact. NASA

Since the new crater is close to the Luna 25 estimated impact point, the LRO team believes it’s most likely to have been caused by the Luna-25 mission rather than by an asteroid or meteorite.

After examining the latest data, NASA said the new crater appears to be around 10 meters in diameter, adding that the impact point was on the steep inner rim of the moon’s Pontécoulant G crater, about 248 miles (400 kilometers) short of Luna 25’s intended landing point.

The LRO, which has been orbiting our nearest neighbor for the last 14 years, recently located the crash site of another spacecraft. Similar to Russia’s doomed mission, Japan’s uncrewed space mission failed in the final moments before touchdown in April, causing it to impact the lunar surface at high speed.

While landing safely on the moon is clearly a challenging process, India achieved a historic landing just last week when it became the first nation to land safely near the lunar South Pole, and only the fourth country to perform a successful soft landing on the moon. The uncrewed Chandrayaan-3 mission includes a small rover called Pragyan that will use various scientific instruments to explore its surroundings before sending its discoveries back to scientists.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
Russia just launched its first lunar mission since 1976
A Russian Soyuz rocket launches the Luna-25 mission.

Russia launches moon lander in race to find water on moon

Russia has successfully launched a Soyuz-2.1b rocket on a mission to the moon -- its first trip to the lunar surface since 1976.

Read more
NASA lunar orbiter locates debris from Japan’s failed lander
iSpace's Hakuto-R Series 1 lander.

NASA has released new images that appear to show the broken remains of Japan’s Hakuto lander, which crashed on the lunar surface in a failed mission last month.

Organized by Tokyo-based lunar exploration startup ispace, the Hakuto-R Mission 1 lunar lander launched in December 2022 with the aim of becoming the first privately funded spacecraft to land and operate on the lunar surface.

Read more
NASA’s Lunar Flashlight satellite won’t make it to its planned orbit
This illustration shows NASA’s Lunar Flashlight carrying out a trajectory correction maneuver with the Moon and Earth in the background. Powered by the small satellite’s four thrusters, the maneuver is needed to reach lunar orbit.

This week has seen good news for one NASA moon mission, as the CAPSTONE satellite recovered from a communications issue, but bad news for another. The Lunar Flashlight mission, which is intended to search the south pole of the moon for water ice, now won't make it to its planned orbit.

This illustration shows NASA’s Lunar Flashlight carrying out a trajectory correction maneuver with the Moon and Earth in the background. NASA/JPL-Caltech

Read more