<p>Smoking a pipe and looking out over the vast, icy Arctic, captain Dmitry Lobusov sounds his ship's horn to signal to passengers they are near their destination: the North Pole.</p>.<p>The Arctic Ocean is too deep to drop anchor, but a thick ice embankment offers a dock for Lobusov's giant vessel -- one among Russia's growing fleet of nuclear-powered icebreakers.</p>.<p>The 160-metre (525-foot) ship called "50 Let Pobedy" ("50 Years of Victory") reduces speed.</p>.<p>"Take a left, we'll stop here," Lobusov tells Diana Kidzhi, his second in command and the most senior woman in Russia's nuclear icebreaker fleet.</p>.<p>Thirty minutes later, the giant red-and-black ship is stopped within short walking distance of Earth's most northerly point.</p>.<p>"Well done," Lobusov says, shaking Kidzhi's hand and disembarking from the deck.</p>.<p>The passengers, including a gaggle of high school students who won places on the trip in a competition, step onto the slippery ice to take photos.</p>.<p>The ice they're standing on -- directly above the ocean floor marking the North Pole -- is shifting in Arctic currents, slowly taking them away from the Pole.</p>.<p>"You always find your own North Pole," says Viktor Boyarsky, a 70-year-old Russian explorer returning to the Arctic.</p>.<p>It has taken the icebreaker three and a half days to traverse the 2,400 kilometres (1,500 miles) to the North Pole from Murmansk, the base of Russia's Northern Fleet.</p>.<p>The journey is only possible in summer, when ice cover is at its lowest. Climate change is making the trip gradually easier year by year.</p>.<p>Still, the 95-strong crew is alert for masses of ice that could impede the ship's progress.</p>.<p>The bridge is in constant contact with the crew controlling the ship's nuclear reactor.</p>.<p>Vladimir Yudin, the ship's chief mechanical engineer, is in charge of its 75,000-horsepower engine, the equivalent of about 75 Formula 1 racecars.</p>.<p>"We have 1,144 settings to manage and just as many sensors that need to be checked regularly," Yudin says.</p>.<p>The engine propels forward the ship's body, which is designed to cut through ice. The front is spoon-shaped, Lobusov explains.</p>.<p>"This allows us to get stuck in ice less often and to better penetrate it," says the 57-year-old, who has spent close to half his life in the Arctic.</p>.<p>The hull is also coated in stainless steel, he says, helping the giant ship glide smoothly and disturbing polar bears in the region as little as possible.</p>
<p>Smoking a pipe and looking out over the vast, icy Arctic, captain Dmitry Lobusov sounds his ship's horn to signal to passengers they are near their destination: the North Pole.</p>.<p>The Arctic Ocean is too deep to drop anchor, but a thick ice embankment offers a dock for Lobusov's giant vessel -- one among Russia's growing fleet of nuclear-powered icebreakers.</p>.<p>The 160-metre (525-foot) ship called "50 Let Pobedy" ("50 Years of Victory") reduces speed.</p>.<p>"Take a left, we'll stop here," Lobusov tells Diana Kidzhi, his second in command and the most senior woman in Russia's nuclear icebreaker fleet.</p>.<p>Thirty minutes later, the giant red-and-black ship is stopped within short walking distance of Earth's most northerly point.</p>.<p>"Well done," Lobusov says, shaking Kidzhi's hand and disembarking from the deck.</p>.<p>The passengers, including a gaggle of high school students who won places on the trip in a competition, step onto the slippery ice to take photos.</p>.<p>The ice they're standing on -- directly above the ocean floor marking the North Pole -- is shifting in Arctic currents, slowly taking them away from the Pole.</p>.<p>"You always find your own North Pole," says Viktor Boyarsky, a 70-year-old Russian explorer returning to the Arctic.</p>.<p>It has taken the icebreaker three and a half days to traverse the 2,400 kilometres (1,500 miles) to the North Pole from Murmansk, the base of Russia's Northern Fleet.</p>.<p>The journey is only possible in summer, when ice cover is at its lowest. Climate change is making the trip gradually easier year by year.</p>.<p>Still, the 95-strong crew is alert for masses of ice that could impede the ship's progress.</p>.<p>The bridge is in constant contact with the crew controlling the ship's nuclear reactor.</p>.<p>Vladimir Yudin, the ship's chief mechanical engineer, is in charge of its 75,000-horsepower engine, the equivalent of about 75 Formula 1 racecars.</p>.<p>"We have 1,144 settings to manage and just as many sensors that need to be checked regularly," Yudin says.</p>.<p>The engine propels forward the ship's body, which is designed to cut through ice. The front is spoon-shaped, Lobusov explains.</p>.<p>"This allows us to get stuck in ice less often and to better penetrate it," says the 57-year-old, who has spent close to half his life in the Arctic.</p>.<p>The hull is also coated in stainless steel, he says, helping the giant ship glide smoothly and disturbing polar bears in the region as little as possible.</p>