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The VSM: Lunokhod-2 25-year anniversary
Luna-21 with Lunokhod-2 landed on Moon 16 January 1973.
This page is steadily growing and soon it will be great(I hope so)
See also: Lunar Probes(local), Lunokhod-1 page (Lavochkin Association site)
All photos here except full Moon and Mare Serenitatis were made by author in NPO Lavochkina museum.


Lunokhod-2 patch

Luna-17/Luna-21

Luna-17/21, top view
Lunokhod-2 was brought to the Moon by Luna-21 spacecraft launched from Baykonur 8 Jan 1973 on a 4-stage Proton rocket.

I don't have any non-copyrighted images of Lunokhod to put on this page, but here are pictures of Lunokhod-3 (yes, Lunokhod-3!), which is very similar to Lunokhod-2, except its cameras.

Luna-21 landed 15 Jan at 23:35 GMT inside 55-km Le Monnier crater on the eastern edge of Mare Serenitatis.
Picture - full Moon
Frame - Mare Serenitatis
Picture - Mare Serenitatis
Frame - Le Monnier Crater
Picture - Le Monnier Crater
Blue line - Lunokhod-2 route

Lunokhod's were controlled remotely from Earth.
This photo shows Lunokhod crew at work.
There were 2 crews working in turn. Shifts were about 2 hours. Each crew consisted of commander, driver, navigator, flight-engineer and high-gain antenna operator.

Crews
Commander:Nikolai YeremenkoIgor Fyodorov
Driver:Gabdulkhay LatypovVyacheslav Dovgan
Navigator:Konstantin DavidovskyVikenty Samal
Flight-Engineer:Leonid MosenzovAlbert Kozhevnikov
Antenna operator:Valeri SapranovNikolai Kozlitin
Reserve:Vasili Chubukin

Lunokhod-2 route
(Dates on the map are probably ends of lunar days)

Lunokhod-2 was very similar in design to Lunokhod-1.
It had 8 wheels, each with independent suspension and its own motor and brake. Any wheel could be permanently disconnected from its motor if the motor gets stuck. Lunokhod's could move at 2 different speeds, 0.9-1 km/h and 1.8-2 km/h and turn in motion as well as on the spot. It was possible to go over obstacles up to 0.4m high or holes up to 0.6m wide. Onboard automatics would stop the rover in case of dangerous tilt or wheel blocking or motor overheating. The crew could override the protection.

Lunokhod-1
link to VRML
Lunokhod-2
link to VRML

Lunokhod-2 had 3 low-rate TV cameras and 4 panoramic cameras. TV cameras could work at different frame rates: 3.2, 5.7, 10.9 and 21.1 seconds per frame (not frames per second). Their vertical resolution could vary from 300 to 400. Whatever frame rate was chosen, exposition was always 1/25 sec. to prevent motion blur.
2 panoramic cameras had field of view of ~180° horizontally and 30° vertically.
2 other cameras had field of view of 360° vertically and 30° horizontally and resolution of 500x6000.