Gary Kitmacher, The Soviet Lunar Program in
Transcription
Gary Kitmacher, The Soviet Lunar Program in
Gary Kitmacher, Space Race: The Soviet Lunar Program in the 1960s Sergei Korolyov Sergei Pavlovich Korolev (1907-1966) is widely regarded as the founder of the Soviet space program. Involved in preWorld War II studies of rocketry in the USSR, Korolev, like many of his colleagues, went through Stalin's prisons and later participated in the search for rocket technology in occupied Germany after WWII. His incredible energy, intelligence, belief in the prospects of space flight, managerial abilities and almost mythical skills in decision-making made him the head of the first Soviet rocket development center, known today as RKK Energia. He deserves the most credits for turning rocket weapons into an instrument of space exploration and making the Soviet Union the world's first space-faring nation. At the peak of his career, Korolev led the development of the first R-7 ICBM, and which has carried Russian cosmonauts into orbit for decades to come until the present day. Korolev's largest undertaking was the development of the N-1 Moon Rocket, Soviet counterpart to the Saturn V. But Korolev died at the height of his career as a result of a botched surgical operation on January 14, 1966. After his death, facing technical challenges, unrealistic schedule and political pressure the N-1 never flew succesfully. Korolev's contribution to the space program was publically recognized by the Soviet authorities only after his death. The first uncensored biography of Korolev. Was published in 2002. Sputnik 1 1957 Sputnik 2 1957 The R-7, developed as the first Soviet Intercontinental Ballistic Missile (ICBM) and then adapted for us to launch the first satellite, first living thing in orbit, the first man and woman into space, and still used to launch Ruzzuian Soyuz and Progress to the International Space Station. R-7 R-7 and Vostok Size comparison of the first two manned spacecraft launched into orbit. R-7 and MercuryAtlas Vostok 1, April 12, 1969 Yuri Gagarin, first man in space Voskhod 1, October, 1964 first multi-man spacecraft Voskhod Spacecraft Voskhod 2, March, 1965 first spacewalk Voskhod 3 Soyuz 1, Vladimir Komarov, killed during landing 1968 Luna 1 First Attempt to Reach the Moon 1958 Luna 3 First Photographs of the Moon’s Farside, 1959 On February 3, 1966, Luna-9 became the first spacecraft to land on the Moon. On February 4 and 5, it transmitted 3 photographic panoramas. Luna 9 First Lunar Soft Landing Luna-17 with Lunokhod-1 Luna-17 landed on the Moon on November 15, 1970. The robotic rover, Lunokhod-1 rolled off the landing platform to explore the surface of the Moon for about a month. Lunachod unmanned Moon rover Luna-21 with Lunokhod-2 Luna-21 entered Lunar orbit on January 12, 1973, and landed on January 15. The robotic rover, Lunokhod-2 rolled off the landing platform to explore the surface of the Moon for about 4 months. Luna 16, 20 and 24 collected samples of lunar soil and returned them to Earth, beginning in 1970. The program returned 0.326 kg of samples. The Luna missions were the first space-exploration sample return missions to rely solely on advanced robotics. Luna-24 was the last spacecraft to soft land on the Moon (Soviet or American), on August 18, 1976. Boring 2.25 meters into the Moon, it obtained a 170.1 gram core sample 1.6 meters in length. The drilling apparatus packed the sample into a 8mm diameter plastic tube, which was wound into a helical container. At the Vernadsky Institute, the core was initially transfered to a flat spiral container to be x-rayed, then transfered to a series of trays. Luna-24 did not carry cameras. Luna 16 First Automated Sample Return Unlike in the US in the 1960s, the Soviet space program had no centralized organization like NASA and no long-term plan. Korolev realized that the growing diversification of the space program would require a major reform of its organizational structure. But the Soviet leadership failed to centralize the program and it remained in the hands of mostly non-specialized design bureaus, many working for different ministeries. Korolev was not the only designer of rockets and spacecraft. Vladimir N. Chelomei had developed military missiles but had no experience with space launchers. Chelomei hired Khrushchev's son, Sergei. That family link offered an advantage in a political system where personal connections were important. Chelomei had Khrushchev's support and the biggest biggest project budget of all bureaus. The Soviet space program contained several rival, parallel projects. Chelomei had an important ally, Valentin Glushko, the primary designer of Soviet rocket engines. Glushko and Korolev had had a series of disagreements over 30 years. Glushko had helped to send Korolev to a forced-labor camp in the 1930s and 40s. Glushko and Chelomei, worked together to develop the Proton rocket, and in 1962 Khrushchev assigned Chelomei's group to prepare for a manned spacecraft intended for circumlunar flight - the LK-1. At this time there was no stated goal of a Moon landing within the Soviet Union. In competition, Korolev allied himself with Nikolai D. Kuznetsov, who had developed but had n o experience in rocket engines. Kuznetsov's began its work on rocket propulsion systems from scratch. In the constrained time available, Kuznetsov was able to develop only a conventionally fueled gasoline/oxygen engine that had little power. The N1 moon rocket would need no fewer than 30 of these engines in its first stage. Korolev developed a series of cornerstone man-in-space projects: Vostok, then the N-1 rocket, and then an advanced multipurpose spacecraft called Soyuz (Union). When the Soyuz was conceived in the early 1960s, space stations, lunar missions and manned flights around Mars were all being considered. The Soyuz spacecraft was designed for use in any of these programs. Korolev’s system consisted of the manned Soyuz, a translunar injection stage, and three tanker spacecraft which would refuel the stage. The Soyuz could also be used to orbit and maneuver to the first Soviet space station. Just as the Soviet moon effort was picking up speed, disaster struck. On 14 January 1966 Korolev died unexpectedly during surgery. He was succeeded by Vasili Mishin, But Mishin was not confirmed in his position until May 1967. He didn’t have Korolev's leadership ability nor his political standing. In January 1967, a modified version of the Soyuz without its orbital compartment meant for circumlunar flight, was tested atop its Proton rocket at Baikonur. Four unmanned test flights were to be conducted in early 1967 followed by the first manned circumlunar flight in June 1967. Then in April, 1967, the first manned Soyuz failed and Vladimir Komarov was killed, the first human to die during a spaceflight. The Soyuz spacecraft was crucial. It was far more advanced than anything attempted before. It could change orbits and dock with other spacecraft. It could fly missions lasting several weeks, and variants of it would be used to fly around the Moon (the L1) and to be the mother craft (LOK) for the manned lunar lander (LK). Soyuz suffered serious development problems. The first three unmanned test missions all failed in November 1966-February 1967. But the Soviets could not afford to wait. Soviet Premier Leonid Brezhnev demanded a first flight in April involving Soyuz 1 and 2, to test the new lunar spacesuits during a 'spacewalk' as well as perform the first-ever docking between two Soviet spacecraft. The rendezvous, docking, and spacewalks were all crucial for the moon missions. Despite several people, including Cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin, trying to persuade leaders that the Soyuz was not ready to fly with a human on board, the decision was made to proceed. Soyuz 1, with Voskhod veteran cosmonaut Vladimir Komarov on board, blasted off on 15 April. The Soyuz 1 flight was plagued by serious problems, and Komarov was commanded back after one day, and the launch of Soyuz 2 (carrying three more cosmonauts) was quickly cancelled. Komarov's spacecraft tumbled out of control and the craft lacked adequate solar power when a solar panel failed to deploy. The returning craft survived the atmospheric re-entry but then the landing parachutes failed to deploy and the capsule impacted at 600km/h. On impact the Soyuz caught fire and little was left of it. Komarov was buried in the Kremlin wall two days later. The Soyuz accident delayed the L1 program; tests did not resume until September and November 1967. Neither spacecraft reached orbit due to problems with the Proton booster, and the original goal of a manned circumlunar flight during the 50th anniversary of the Bolshevik Revolution in October 1967 had to be abandoned. The L1 project became known to the world in March 1968 when a 7K-L1 craft (called "Zond-4" by the Soviets to conceal its true purpose) was placed into a highly elliptical orbit 180 degrees away from the Moon. Zond-4 had to be destroyed when a technical error shifted the landing point into the Gulf of Guinea. The next two attempts failed to reach orbit, and failed on the launch pad. Meanwhile, NASA started out with a major tragedy, the Apollo launch pad fire, in January 1967. This forced a major redesign of the spacecraft, and an acceleration of the Apollo program’s test schedule. The Americans announced in August, 1968, that they would test the first Apollo manned in orbit in October, 1967, and if successful , would plan that the next mission, Apollo 8, in December, 1968, be sent to orbit the moon. Though the Soviets had been planning for their first circumlunar flight in January, 1969, after two successful unmanned tests, now they had little choice but to move the manned Zond-7 mission to December 1968 instead. Int would be a last ditch effort to beat Americans around the moon. First came the unmanned Zond-5 in September., 1967 It was the first L1 craft to fly around the Moon . The mission went well . The Soviet Navy picked up the capsule in the Indian Ocean. The biological experiments contained on board , turtles and banana flies, had survived. The Russians confirmed that the Zond flights were testing an automated spacecraft capable of a manned lunar fly-by. Everything now depended on Zond-6 in November. If it was a complete success there was still a small chance that the next flight in early December would be manned. The probe was launched safely on 10 November and flew past the Moon three days later. But the landing went awry. First the spacecraft depressurized because of a faulty rubber gasket a few hours before reentry, killing the animals on board. The capsule descended safely through the atmosphere but then parachute deployment came too early and the capsule crashed on Soviet soil. The L1 cosmonauts sent a letter to the Soviet government asking for permission to launch a manned mission. They even travelled to the Baikonur Cosmodrome in order to be ready to fly at a short notice. But the permission never came. Apollo 8 was successful in December. All of the planned manned L1 flights were put on hold. Two unmanned tests in late 1969 failed as a result of Proton launch vehicle problems. A final unmanned lunar flight, Zond 8, took place in October, 1970, but the reentry profile lost attitude control of the capsule and it followed a high G trajectory that would have injured any cosmonauts. No more Zond lunar flights were ever tried. Zond L-1 spacecraft The second series used a stripped-down variant of the manned Soyuz spacecraft, and consisted of the descent and service modules, but lacked the orbital module. Zond was capable of carrying as many as 2 cosmonauts. The failure of the first Soyuz in April, 1968, delayed the possibility of a lunar mission. A series of four test flights between 1968 and 1970 would all have killed or injured a human crew. The Soviets ran out of time to beat the US when Apollo 8 launched with 3 astronauts into orbit around the Moon in December 1968. Zond L-1 mission The Zond spacecraft, aka Soyuz 7K-L1, was designed to carry a single cosmonaut around the moon and back in a non-orbital loop. The booster rocket was the Proton. The Spacecraft was similar to a Soyuz without the orbital compartment Returned capsules from 2 Zond circumlunar flights Zond L-1 Proton rocket used to launch Zond Block D stage The last L1 spaceaft flew in December, 1970, in this configuration in order to test the Block D stage in earth orbit. This flight was successful. Zond L-1 PREPARING FOR THE FIRST MANNED LUNAR LANDING After the Soviets missed the opportunity to be first around the moon with the L1 missions, the focus shifted to the N1 program. The first flight-ready N1 moon rocket carrier rocket was on its launch pad at Baikonur in May 1968, but had to be returned for repair when cracks were found in the first stage. It was tested again on its pad in November, 1968, and then prepared for launch beginning in February, 1969. The rocket was developed in record time because the government did not commit serious resources and declare a national goal to land cosmonauts on the moon until after the Apollo fire, in February, 1967. In March 1968, cosmonauts started training at Star City in preparation for a Moon landing. An Mi-8 helicopter was used to simulate the final descent to the surface and a moonwalk simulator was installed in the Star City gymnasium. The spacecraft, designated the L3, was not ready however. It was decided to test the N-1 rocket with an unmanned L1 spacecraft to perform high-resolution photography of potential landing sites from lunar orbit. Because development of the L3 LOK and LK spacecraft was lagging, it would not be ready for a first test flight in 1970. The first lunar-landing mission would be commanded by the Voskhod 2 first spacewalker, Alexei Leonov, with Oleg Makarov serving as the LOK pilot in lunar orbit. The Soviets hoped that unplanned setbacks during the US Apollo program might cause sufficient delay to permit a Soviet cosmonaut to get to the Moon first. In the meantime, the Soviets decided to proceed with a new space station which would be competitive with the American Manned Orbiting Laboratory, to be called Almaz. And they decided to develop, using a large cargo vehicle called TKS, Coupled with a nuclear upper stage, to be used for a manned Mars fly-by mission. Later, in 1971, the TKS program was coupled with the Almaz program to become the DOS-1 Salyut space station. The first succesful manned Soyuz missions, Soyuz 4 and 5 were launched in January, 1969. The two vehicles rendezvoused and docked in orbit and two of the four crewmen performed EVAs testing versions of the Kretchet moon suit, transferring from Soyuz 5 to Soyuz 4. First N-1 rocket on the launch pad in 1968 N-1 N-1 L-3 In early 1969, the Soviets were ready to test their various lunar-landing spacecraft for the first time. The first to go was an unmanned lunar rover. But its Proton rocket exploded 40 seconds after launch on 19 February 1969. On 21 February the first N1 booster, 3L, roared to life and the giant rocket began to rise skyward. But at 66s after liftoff, probably near the time of maximum dynamic pressure, a leaking oxidizer pipe started a fire at the rear of the first stage. The unmanned L1 Zond escape system activated, pulling the capsule away from the booster. The N1 was destroyed by range safety while the L1 landed safely. Heat and vibrations from the first stage's 30 engines had damaged the rocket, it was later determined. The Apollo 9 astronauts successfully tested the first Apollo Lunar Module in Earth orbit in February and March. Shortly after the N1 launch failure. In May, Apollo 10 tested the Apollo Lunar Module in moon orbit , in a dress rehearsal of the Apollo 11 mission. After some modifications, a second N1 launch attempt, rocket number 5L was launched July 3. Nine seconds after liftoff at an altitude of 200 meters, a piece of debris entered the oxidizer pump of one of the engines, causing it to explode. The explosion wiped out other engines and vital control systems. The N1 engine control/thrust coordination system shut down the remaining engines. The launch escape tower then pulled an unmanned L1 spacecraft, away from the booster, which fell back on the pad. The resulting explosion destroyed the porimary launch pad 2 and did significant damage to the test pad 1 and an N1 test vehicle 500 meters away. The last Soviet hope was to return a sample of lunar soil before the Americans could land on the moon. On July 13, 1969, only 3 days before the launch of Apollo 11, a Proton booster sent Luna 15 towards the Moon. But the Soviet probe's landing system failed and it crashed on the Moon. The same day, on July 20, 1969, Neil Armstrong became the first man to walk on the Moon. The Soviets had lost. The first N-1 to be launched, L3, on its pad to the left, while a second booster is tested on a second pad to the right in February, 1969. N-1 Scale model of the N-1 rocket illustrating the interior arrangement of propellant tanks and rocket engines. After two years of re-work and re-testing, the Soviets were ready to fly the N1 again. The launch took place June 27, 1971. At an altitude of about 250 meters, the support structure between the second and third stages collapsed. The third stage and unmanned LK/LOK spacecraft toppled over, falling near the launch pad. A new plan for a revised L-3M moon project was presented to the Council of Chief Designers, and was approved in early 1972. The new project would use two N-1 rockets. One would launch a large lunar landing stage and the second would carry a crew in a capsule that provided a habitat throughout the flight. The crew capsule would meet and dock to the lander stage in lunar orbit, and the entire 100,000 pound vehicle descend to the lunar surface. This was about 4 times the mass of the Apollo LM. 2 or 3 cosmonauts would spend up to a month on the lunar surface. A Soyuz capsule fwould be used for the landing on Earth . The Soviet government never funded the program however. MORE N1 FAILURES The fourth and final N1 rocket launched the morning on November 23, 1972, just about 1 month before the last Apollo moon landing. At 90 seconds after launch, a line carrying liquid oxygen failed and an oxygen fire broke out. All engines on the 1st stage were shut down 107 seconds into the flight and only six seconds before second stage separation. The escape rocket pulled the payload, an unmanned LOK orbiter, away from the rocket, which was then destroyed by range safety. Two new N1s were constructed, vehicle s 8L and 9L, the first set for launch in August 1974 and the second later that year. Mishin had came increasingly under fire for the failure of the N-1 and for problems with the Salyut space stations. In May 1974, Mishin was dismissed and replaced by Valentin Glushko. Glushko immediately suspended the existing lunar program and began planning a program for a lunar base using an entirely new rocket to be called Vulcan. The plans were opposed by the Academy of Sciences, the government and the military. They regarded the US Shuttle, now being tested in preparation for orbital flight, as a more serious military threat, so the Soviet program turned their attention to development of Buran instead of any more moon rockets. Components of the remaining six N1 rockets were destroyed. The last Soviet lunar probe, Luna 24, was launched in October 1976. Stage Designations N-1 RD-170 N-1 Engines L-3 LK Kretchet Moonsuit Lunar Cabin and Cosmonaut 1 Launch from Earth 2 Trans-lunar Injection 3 Lunar Orbit Insertion 4 Cosmonaut Transfers to Lunar Cabin 5 Lunar Descent 6 Maneuvers to Landing Site 7 Lunar Landing 8 Depressurization and Hatch Opening 9 Exit from Lunar Cabin 10 Set Foot on Moon 11 Moonwalk and Set Up Flag 12 Launch and Ascent From Moon 13 Rendezvous in Moon Orbit 14 Transfer Moon Rocks to LOK 15 Transfer Cosmonaut to LOK 16 Trans-Earth Injection 17 Entry into Earth’s Atmosphere 18 Earth’s Landing L-3Mission Sequence N-1 Components now in or near the Baikonur Facility photos by G. Kitmacher Sun screen at an employee resort camp Stage split in half and used for storage sheds Launch pads later used for Buran Launch pad tilt table Bulkheads used for planters, children’s sandboxes On the pads, January, 1996 Stage used for housing at employee resort camp Soyuz return capsule External views of early and later L3M manned lunar lander designs by Glushko.