Lunar exploration

inMoon
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Early studies

Investigations of the Moon and some understanding of lunar phenomena can be traced back to a few centuries bce. In ancient China the Moon’s motion was carefully recorded as part of a grand structure of astrological thought. In both China and the Middle East, observations became accurate enough to enable the prediction of eclipses, and the recording of eclipses left data of great value for later scientists interested in tracing the history of the Earth-Moon system. (See eclipse: Uses of eclipses for astronomical purposes.) Several early Greek philosophers saw reason to believe that the Moon was inhabited, although they did not base their conclusion on scientific principles. The Greek astronomer and mathematician Hipparchus, on the other hand, took an experimental approach: observing Earth’s round shadow creeping across the Moon during a lunar eclipse, he concluded that Earth must be spherical and that the Moon was an independent world, and he correctly explained the Moon’s phases and accurately estimated the distance between the two bodies. Later, Mayan calendars were constructed that reflected the results of careful observation and long-range prediction.

For centuries, knowledge about the Moon accumulated slowly, driven by astrological and navigational needs, until an outburst of progress began in the Renaissance. In the early 1600s the German astronomer Johannes Kepler used observations made by Tycho Brahe of Denmark to find empirically the laws governing planetary motion. Kepler wrote a remarkable work of science fiction, Somnium (“The Dream”), that describes the life of imagined inhabitants of the Moon and correctly portrays such facts as the high temperature of the Moon’s sunlit side. In 1609–10 Galileo began his telescopic observations that forever changed human understanding of the Moon. Most effort hitherto had been devoted to understanding the movements of the Moon through space, but now astronomers began to focus their attention on the character of the Moon itself.

Exploration by spacecraft

First robotic missions

Following the launch in 1957 of the U.S.S.R.’s satellite Sputnik, the first spacecraft to orbit Earth, it became obvious that the next major goal of both the Soviet and the U.S. space programs would be the Moon (see space exploration). The United States quickly prepared and launched a few robotic lunar probes, most of which failed and none of which reached the Moon. The Soviet Union had more success, achieving in 1959 the first escape from Earth’s gravity with Luna 1, the first impact on the lunar surface with Luna 2, and the first photographic survey of the Moon’s far side with Luna 3. After the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) was founded in 1958, the U.S. program became more ambitious technically and more scientifically oriented. Initial spacecraft investigations were geared toward studying the Moon’s fundamental character as a planetary body by means of seismic observation, gamma-ray spectrometry, and close-up imaging. Scientists believed that even limited seismic data would give clues toward resolving the question as to whether the Moon was a primitive, undifferentiated body or one that had been heated and modified by physical and chemical processes such as those on Earth. Gamma-ray measurements would complement the seismic results by showing whether the Moon’s interior had sufficient radioactivity to serve as an active heat engine, and they would also give some information on the chemical composition of the lunar surface. Imaging would reveal features too small to be seen from Earth, perhaps providing information on lunar surface processes and also arousing public interest.

Among nine U.S. Ranger missions launched between 1961 and 1965, Ranger 4 (1962) became the first U.S. spacecraft to strike the Moon. Only the last three craft, however, avoided the plaguing malfunctions that limited or prematurely ended the missions of their predecessors. Ranger 7 (1964) returned thousands of excellent television images before impacting as designed, and Rangers 8 and 9 (both 1965) followed successfully. The impact locale of Ranger 7 was named Mare Cognitum for the new knowledge gained, a major example of which was the discovery that even small lunar features have been mostly subdued from incessant meteorite impacts.

After a number of failures in the mid-1960s, the Soviet Union scored several notable achievements: the first successful lunar soft landing by Luna 9 and the first lunar orbit by Luna 10, both in 1966. Pictures from Luna 9 revealed the soft, rubbly nature of the regolith and, because the landing capsule did not sink out of sight, confirmed its approximate bearing strength. Gamma-ray data from Luna 10 hinted at a basaltic composition for near-side regions. In 1965 the Soviet flyby mission designated Zond 3 returned good pictures of the Moon’s far side.

In the mid-1960s the United States carried out its own soft-landing and orbital missions. In 1966 Surveyor 1 touched down on the Moon and returned panoramic television images. Six more Surveyors followed between 1966 and 1968, with two failures; they provided not only detailed television views of lunar scenery but also the first chemical data on lunar soil and the first soil-mechanics information showing mechanical properties of the top few centimeters of the regolith. Also, during 1966–67, five U.S. Lunar Orbiters made photographic surveys of most of the lunar surface, providing the mapping essential for planning the Apollo missions.