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But before humans could venture forth to Earth's nearest
neighbor, robotic reconnaissance was necessary, and that reconnaissance was
carried out in the midst of a geopolitical environment that fostered intense
competition between two superpowers, the United States and the Soviet Union. The United States made the first lunar
orbit attempt on August 17, 1958, six weeks before NASA was founded, under the
auspices of the Air Force. Dubbed
"Able 1" because of its Thor-Able 1 launch vehicle, the mission
lasted only 77 seconds when the first stage exploded at an altitude of 15
kilometers. Eight weeks later Able 2
reached an altitude of 115,000 kilometers, and returned useful information
about the van Allen radiation belts before falling back to Earth. Meanwhile, the Soviets had launched their
first entry (unnamed) in the lunar sweepstakes. Several Russian attempts failed before Luna
2 made the first lunar impact near the Sea of Serenity in September, 1959,
depositing Soviet emblems and causing little serenity in the
Meanwhile, the United States Army and Air Force had tried two more launches in 1958, and NASA attempted its first lunar launch in 1959 with Pioneer 4. The latter failed in its lunar flyby objective, but became the first American spacecraft to enter heliocentric orbit. It was with the Ranger series of spacecraft in 1961 that the Americans would prove they were serious about lunar exploration. President Kennedy's decision in May, 1961 to land a man on the Moon by the end of the 1960s gave renewed impetus to American robotic exploration. The Ranger series of spacecraft is remarkable for its persistence in the face of failure. As Cargill Hall vividly recounts in Lunar Impact: A History of Project Ranger, when the first six Ranger spacecraft failed to reach their objective, consternation reigned as the media pounded NASA and JPL for their shortcomings. Luckily, Ranger 7 proved an unequivocal success in midsummer 1964 by returning 4,316 images on its way to impacting the Moon, capturing the last image less than 3 seconds before impact on the northern rim of the Sea of Clouds. With resolution 1000 times better than ground-based photos, scientists were able to conclude that the lunar maria were a good location for a human landing. In 1965 Rangers 8 and 9 returned nearly 13,000 more high resolution photographs of the lunar surface. From authorization and design to finish, the Ranger program had lasted from 1959-1965, revolutionized our knowledge of specific parts of the lunar surface, and put Americans on the path toward a human landing. Even more, the program had laid the foundations for flight operations, including the Deep Space Network, that would prove essential for deep space navigation in later missions to the Moon and planets.
The unmanned Surveyor 3 spacecraft photographed during the
Apollo 12 second extravehicular activity (EVA-2) on the surface of the Moon,
November 20, 1969. The Apollo 12 Lunar Module, landed within 600 feet of
Surveyor III in the
The next objective, for both the Russians and Americans, was
a soft landing. The Soviets were also
persistent – with Luna 9 they achieved a lunar landing in February 1966, but
only after twelve attempts. By sending
back the first images from the lunar surface, Luna 9 not only returned
scientific data, it also proved that a heavy lander would not sink into a heap
of moondust. Three months later the
first of a series of American Surveyor spacecraft touched down on the
This historic image is the first view of Earth taken by a
spacecraft from the vicinity of the Moon. The photo was transmitted to Earth by
the United States Lunar Orbiter I and received at the NASA tracking station at
Robledo De Chavela near
Meanwhile, in 1966 NASA launched its Lunar Orbiter program,
needed to obtain meter-resolution images for potential Apollo landing
sites. Lunar Orbiter 1 gave us the first
image of the Earth from the Moon, and
Lunar Orbiter 3 imaged the landing site for Apollo 11, the
Further Reading
Burrows, William E. This New Ocean: The Story of the First Space Age (The Modern Library: New York, 1999).
Byers, Bruce K. Destination Moon: A History of the Lunar Orbiter Program (NASA Technical Memorandum 3487: NASA, 1977), online at
http://www.hq.nasa.gov/office/pao/History/TM-3487/top.htm
Hall, Cargill, Lunar Impact: A History of Project Ranger (NASA: Washington, DC, 1977), online at http://history.nasa.gov/SP-4210/pages/Cover.htm
Montgomery, Scott L. The Moon and Western Imagination (Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 1999)
NASA Office of Space Science and Applications, Surveyor Program Results (NASA SP-184, 1969), online at
http://ntrs.nasa.gov/archive/nasa/casi.ntrs.nasa.gov/
19690027073_1969027073.pdf
Siddiqi, Asif. Deep Space Chronicle: A Chronology of Deep Space and Planetary Probes (Monographs in Aerospace History: NASA, 2002)
Steven J. Dick