Clandestine NATO trainer saboteurs from Germany, armed with The Sims 3!Clearly the work of Ukrainian Moon nazis.
It added that its equipment had registered "the event of a micrometeorite impact".
The Soviets sent plenty of probes to the Moon. The problem is that Russia can't even measure up to the Soviet space program anymore.Obviously this failed. Ruzzia does not have the tech to go to the moon. Hell, they can barely make a progress capsule that doesn't have holes in it. Their only tech is ancient soviet stuff and that's not going to cut it for a complex mission like that.
since that time Russian engineers have been sending commands for small engine burns to correct the spacecraft's orbit. Roscosmos sent another of these commands on Saturday to put Luna 25 into a "pre-landing orbit," ahead of a landing that had been due to occur as soon as Monday.
They're bombing hospitals, schools, residential buildings, theaters.... yeah, I feel the same way. Fuck their entire barbaric system, let it crash and burn.I have never said this before about the failure of any nation's scientific endeavors, but...
good.
Until Putin is dead and Russia can act like a responsible global citizen, I hope everything they try to do crashes and burns.
Eh. I'm perfectly fine with Russia not being involved in lunar exploration. Or with anything else outside their borders.I'm a bit torn, I think the efforts around moon exploration is great, I would just as prefer to not have Russia be able use it for propaganda. Consequently, I'm fine with this turn of events
Science is pure and faultless. But unlike spherical cows, science doesn't exists in a vacuum. Scientific achievements can be used for propaganda and for evil.Absolutely agreed. Russia is an ultranationalist state that has descended into fascism under Putin's rule. If a successful Luna 25 mission would provide fuel to Russia's nationalist forces and delay the ideological reckoning that must eventually appear (if Russia is to stop having imperialist and irredentist ambitions), then the mission must fail.
Too often people make the mistake of believing that science is always pure and faultless, when it can be intimately connected to the social and political goals of a sponsor country. That is the case here.
Technically and legally speaking, Russia is a successor state of the USSR - UN Security Council is probably the most pronounced example of the fact.This and this again!
Russia singlehandedly and quite neo‑colonialy appropriating all of the Soviet achievements that came out of CCCP's constituent nations is just so on par with their current propaganda.
Probably the best to call them "Muscovy", that's about right. High hopes here all their colonies break free soon, they surely deserve the last decolonisation that there is.
Just as an aside, it might be worth explicitly pointing out that this is an unmanned spacecraft, especially with the use of “alive” in the article title.
OneWeb nefariously hid defective components in their satellites that failed after RussiaPlenty of US electronics components to blame I guess.
Ahem, technically and legally speaking, that's not as clear‑cut as you make it sound to be. Like any international legal matter, there are a few caveats and objections to it...Technically and legally speaking, Russia is a successor state of the USSR - UN Security Council is probably the most pronounced example of the fact.
It depends on the spacecraft. Reportedly modern satellites are well protected with security credentials and access controls, but often there is little to no onboard security because a) the now possibly mistaken belief that a malicious actor has no access to deep space broadcasting or receiving (security by obscurity), or b) that there is extreme worry that bitflips to a critical storage area (like where the keys are stored) could lock you out of the spacecraft entirely. For this reason, many spacecraft have the ability to read out and alter arbitrary memory locations via radio, and in fact this has saved several missions.Not saying that this is what happened, but this kinds of missions that receive commands from Earth, what kind of protections do they have for malicious actors? Could somebody with a powerful transmitter send a replay attack to this spacecraft?
Yeah, it was mostly a fait accompli. Russia just sat down in the USSR's position on committees, and unfortunately nobody fought it at the time because relations were good. A lot of things might be different if they had lost some of those veto powers.Ahem, technically and legally speaking, that's not as clear‑cut as you make it sound to be. Like any international legal matter, there are a few caveats and objections to it...
and preparing the self heating tea.Nope, they are still choosing the appropriate basement window for the inevitable fall from grace.
Have you ever considered that the inanimate objects might not like being anthropomorphized?We enjoy anthropomorphism.
"Johnny 5 is alive"
Who? The Ukrainians? They have better things to do. I suppose the Chinese (or the US) could do it but why?Not saying that this is what happened, but this kinds of missions that receive commands from Earth, what kind of protections do they have for malicious actors? Could somebody with a powerful transmitter send a replay attack to this spacecraft?
One factor of course is that Ukraine and Belarus already had UN membership from 1945. Another that the breakup of the USSR was not a single event, morphing into the CIS with Russia dominant. There was never really a moment to contest the matter even without the policy of other Security Council members to support Yeltsin and ensure a peaceful transition.Yeah, it was mostly a fait accompli. Russia just sat down in the USSR's position on committees, and unfortunately nobody fought it at the time because relations were good. A lot of things might be different if they had lost some of those veto powers.
I'm pretty sure that if the probe was in a low lunar orbit, it will find a way to impact the surface soon enough. Orbits around the moon aren't particularly stable. What would be awesome is if other countries' probes could find the Russian lander and track it to the very end. Perhaps we can get some spectroscopy of the ejecta and get useful information out of the event.Not wanting to jinx it by saying it loud, but I am still hoping for a nice and very energetic lithobraking manoeuvre from Luna 25. Just losing comms with it still being in the pre‑landing orbit would be kinda anti‑climatic!
That would serve them right, IMO. Although I am pretty sure TASS would still try to twist a high‑speed lithobraking crash event into a "very successful landing" somehow...
The soviets had tracking ships to provide coverage. Contact referenced them. Guess they were sold off for mega yachts and hookers.Given the longitudinal extent of Russia's territory, it should be closer to 18 hours a day. Their lack of tracking ability is no one else's fault but their own.
And russia is a very ... girthy... country, they can increase their coverage by putting receivers on either end. But still, it's not full coverage.That seems very misleading. The moon is visible over Russia 12 hours per day, just like everywhere else in the world. Russia's lack of access to the US's Deep Space Network means they don't have 24 hour a day visibility, but I wouldn't call 12 hours a day "relatively few". Tilley's post was clear but the characterization of it in the article is misleading.
They are just copying the ccp. Funny that.This and this again!
Russia singlehandedly and quite neo‑colonialy appropriating all of the Soviet achievements that came out of CCCP's constituent nations is just so on par with their current propaganda.
Probably the best to call them "Muscovy", that's about right. High hopes here all their colonies break free soon, they surely deserve the last decolonisation that there is.
I'd have though the emission spectra of S. tuberosum are pretty well characterised by now, but what do I know ;-)I'm pretty sure that if the probe was in a low lunar orbit, it will find a way to impact the surface soon enough. Orbits around the moon aren't particularly stable. What would be awesome is if other countries' probes could find the Russian lander and track it to the very end. Perhaps we can get some spectroscopy of the ejecta and get useful information out of the event.
Well, scientifically there may not even be a difference between luck and random events.It seems obvious that luck (if luck even exists...there's no proof it does...reality may very well be a chain of totally random events) can't be manipulated - otherwise there would be how-to's on YouTube and everyone who watched them would be able to win the lottery, get the girl ánd live happily ever after, just to name some stuff.
Same for negatively manipulating luck known in the US as "jinxing" ..if that was a real thing for example many if not all institutions would employ battalions of jinxers to mess with perceived enemies' luck etc.
Still, in spite of what logic and experience dictate these superstitions remain véry popular.
Interesting creatures, humans.![]()
Doesn't take a nation state to send commands into space:Who? The Ukrainians? They have better things to do. I suppose the Chinese (or the US) could do it but why?
Don't substitute Mylar foil for aluminum....
Not me. We're way past Schadenfreude by now, and I'd rather Russia be forced to contemplate the consequences of their decisions than them being able to blame (again, but correctly for once) foreign agents and sabotage.It's doubtful, but not impossible, that someone took advantage of downtime and sent disruptive commands to the spacecraft. If it broadcasts a rickroll or the bayractar song before crashing, I'm gonna cheer.
ULA sniper at it again...
Spacex could probably get a probe there in time to live stream the Russian crash.I'm pretty sure that if the probe was in a low lunar orbit, it will find a way to impact the surface soon enough. Orbits around the moon aren't particularly stable. What would be awesome is if other countries' probes could find the Russian lander and track it to the very end. Perhaps we can get some spectroscopy of the ejecta and get useful information out of the event.
I believe that all sciences use the right-hand rule for defining things like that, so even without a magnetic field there would still be a top and bottom of the axis of rotation. We just happen to call those north and south respectively.Well, would the moon even have a north pole? Maybe a rotational-axis north pole, but it shouldn't have a magnetic field.