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Luna 23
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==Overview== ''Luna 23'' was a Soviet [[Moon]] lander mission which was intended to [[Sample return mission|return a lunar sample to Earth]]. Launched to the Moon by a [[Proton-K]]/[[Blok D|D]], the spacecraft tipped over on its side and was damaged upon landing in [[Mare Crisium]]. The sample collecting apparatus could not operate and no samples were returned. The lander continued transmissions for three days after landing. In 1976, ''[[Luna 24]]'' landed several hundred meters away and successfully returned samples. The asteroid-like object [[2010 KQ]] is believed to be a rocket that parted the ''Luna 23'' module after launch.<ref name=gomez_2012/> ''Luna 23'' was the first modified lunar sample return spacecraft, designed to return a deep core sample of the Moon's surface (hence the change in index from Ye-8-5 to Ye-8-5M). While ''[[Luna 16]]'' and ''[[Luna 20]]'' had returned samples from a depth of 0.3 meters, the new spacecraft was designed to dig to 2.5 meters. After a midcourse correction on 31 October, ''Luna 23'' entered orbit around the Moon on 2 November 1974. Parameters were 104 Γ 94 kilometers at 138Β° inclination. Following several more changes to the orbit, the spacecraft descended to the lunar surface on 6 November and landed in the southernmost portion of Mare Crisium. Landing coordinates were 13Β° north latitude and 62Β° east longitude. During landing in "unfavorable" terrain, the lander's drilling device was evidently damaged, preventing fulfillment of the primary mission, the return of lunar soil to Earth. Scientists devised a makeshift plan to conduct a limited science exploration program with the stationary lander. Controllers maintained contact with the spacecraft until 9 November 1974. High resolution orbital photographs taken by the NASA [[Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter]] and released in March 2012 showed the ''Luna 23'' spacecraft lying on its side on the lunar surface. The spacecraft evidently tipped over upon landing, perhaps due to higher than nominal vertical and/or horizontal velocities at touchdown.<ref name=lroc/>
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