Canon EOS 5D Mark II
ƒ/2.8
50 mm
1/3,200
100

I have this spare metal petal at work, from the JPL-equivalent in Soviet times.

The first soft landing on the moon was by Luna 9 in February 1966. Actually, it was the first time humanity operated a spacecraft on any planetary body, and the first success after 11 failed attempts. It proved that landing on the moon was possible, without sinking into the dust as some feared.

Cushioned by a landing bag for touchdown, Luna 9 unfolded four metal petals, like this one, which stabilized the spacecraft on the lunar surface. Rod antennas sprung out, with the inner surfaces of the petals serving as reflectors, and a rotating mirror and camera assembly sent back panoramic views of the lunar surface — the first time humanity saw close-up views of the surface of our moon. I like to think of it as the B612 rose. =)

Luna 9 now rests on the Oceanus Procellarum. This is the spare anchor petal for Luna 9, built by the Lavochkin Association, where I visited on my last trip to Russia.

The pictures from Luna 9 were not released immediately by the U.S.S.R. Instead, the U.K.’s Jodrell Bank Observatory, which was monitoring the craft, noticed that the signal format used was identical to the system used internationally by newspapers for transmitting pictures. The Daily Express rushed a suitable receiver to the Observatory and the pictures from Luna 9 were decoded and published worldwide.

And much of the mission detail comes from the NSA, intercepting the Soviet signals all the way. They even measured the Doppler shift of Luna-9 transmissions as she slowed down on descent to the lunar surface.

9 responses to “Planting a Flower on the Moon — Luna 9”

  1. The full flower of ’66Luna-9-1The bounce, roll and bloom1966 Russian Lunar 9 unmanned lander transmitted panoramic pictures of theThe first image ever transmitted from the moon…mosaic94xb
    This particular mosaic came from a few scans with different tilts; here is one full scan for example.

    The top of this petalIMG_0473The inside of this petalIMG_0478

  2. perhaps someone can retrieve it with the next moon mission 🙂

  3. Love this one….amazing accomplishment and brilliance…thank you for sharing…amazing thing that space memorabilia looks practically antique…take my breath away:)

  4. Very sputnik from a design standpoint – obviously not american 😉

  5. [http://www.flickr.com/photos/scleroplex]
    I wonder if there will ever be another moon mission. The first one was more of a propaganda exercise, payback for Sputnik, kind of thing… Highly significant that nobody has gone there since. In the end all that was achieved was to spoil the mystery and poetry that fed countless myths, religions and silly songs.

  6. Human translunar tourist flights are underway. But a landing is best handled by robot for a while.

    P.S. the East Germans celebrated Luna 9 a lot more than we did in the West, where few seem to know of it at all…

    1966EGermanyE886

    moreCelebrating LunaAs celebrated in my Estonian homelandCelebrating Luna in Estonia

  7. I recently obtained the Luna 9 book from Oleg Ivanovsky, director of the program hereLuna 9 — The First Lunar Lander

  8. and the first official photo released by the Soviets First Official Photo from the Surface of the Moon

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *