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LUNAR EXPLORATION BEGINS
Selecting Sites for Exploration
Since its primary objective was to land on the moon and return, Apollo
11 had been targeted for the least hazardous site. When the emphasis
shifted to exploration, however, scientific considerations carried much
greater weight in the choice of a landing site.20 Even so, every landing was as risky as the
first, and if MSC vetoed a site or expressed strong reservations about
its feasibility on operational grounds, Headquarters and the Apollo Site
Selection Board were reluctant to override the center's recommendations
for the sake of enhanced scientific return.21
During 1968 and early 1969 the Apollo Site Selection Board necessarily
concentrated on choosing landing areas for the first two missions. Five
prime candidates had been chosen by December 1967, from which three - an
eastern, a central, and a western, to allow for possible delays in the
launch - were picked for the first landing. [see Chapter 8] It was more or less taken for
granted that if the first landing mission should succeed, then the
second would be sent to another of those five sites, since much of the
necessary planning would already have been done. If the first mission
landed in an eastern mare, the second would be sent to a western one,
and vice versa.
The Board's advisory groups continued to evaluate Lunar Orbiter
photographs and by June of 1969 had produced a list of 22 sites for
lunar exploration missions.[Table 1]
These were chosen for their apparent value in contributing to answers to
one or more of the 15 questions in lunar exploration. [Appendix 3] For most of these sites, changes in
operational philosophy would be required. Only one site, not three,
would be available at each launch opportunity; point landings (within 1
kilometer, 0.62 miles) would be necessary, to place the landing module
as near the features of interest as possible; approach paths might be
rough or undulating rather than smooth; free-return trajectories could
not be used; and the high-resolution photography required to certify a
site was generally not available.22
With more than twice as many interesting locations to visit as there
were missions planned, site selection would be a complex process at
best. Scientists' priorities might change as the results of early
missions became known and as NASA developed more precise landing
techniques and extended the area where the spacecraft could land.
Reconciling the goals of science with the constraints of mission
operations required an early start and continuing tradeoffs as the
project progressed.
At the June 3 meeting of the Apollo Site Selection Board, chairman Sam
Phillips, anticipating heavy work loads if the board was to accomplish
its task within tight schedules, requested that the board meet monthly
if possible. He directed Lee Scherer to prepare a thorough briefing on
the scientific objectives of lunar exploration and suggested that the
Group for Lunar Exploration Planning propose a sequence of missions that
would accomplish those objectives. Board members agreed a that to make
sensible choices between sites they needed a better understanding of the
rationale of lunar exploration and the operational improvements being
planned.23
The meeting then turned to the question of a site for the second
mission. Scientists reiterated their preference for a western (younger)
mare if the first mission landed safely at an eastern (older) site. Two
western sites were on the short list of preferred sites compiled in
1968: one just below the equator some 450 kilometers (280 miles) south
and slightly east of crater Kepler and the other about 250 kilometers
(155 miles) northwest of the first. Benjamin Milwitzky of the Lunar
Exploration Office then suggested that Apollo 12 land near a Surveyor
spacecraft. As early as January 1969 Milwitzky, formerly the
Headquarters program manager for Surveyor, had suggested visiting a
landed Surveyor and returning some spacecraft parts and nearby surface
samples to earth for study. This could yield valuable engineering
information on the effects of the space environment on materials,
besides allowing postmission verification of Surveyor's scientific
results.24
MSC representatives then presented a rationale for considering two other
western sites. Although these had been eliminated in selecting the final
five sites, they met MSC's criteria for operational suitability and
offered certain advantages over the first two. Both sites were near
Surveyor spacecraft.25 The Board
reacted unfavorably to these suggestions, pointing out that the site
where Surveyor III was located was in a younger mare that
was not much different from those in the eastern sites, whereas the
scientists' first two choices were in typical older regions. Examining
the Surveyor would detract from the other objectives of the mission.
Furthermore, if returning Surveyor parts were set as a goal for the
mission, failure to accomplish the necessary precision in landing could
be interpreted as failure - which would not, in fact, be the case.
Chairman Sam Phillips was reluctant to add any more sites to the list
for the second mission. He did not favor either of MSC's choices and
instead directed Houston to examine two sites considered highly
desirable by the scientists, Hipparchus and Fra Mauro, and report On
their suitability.26
MSC analyzed the data available for these two sites and found them
unacceptable for the second landing mission. Hipparchus had only about
half as much good landing area as the average Apollo 11 site and Fra
Mauro was worse. Photographic coverage in both cases was marginal.
Houston recommended that the site selection board give no further
consideration to these two locations, but that it reexamine the
Surveyor III site, which met all the criteria for the first
landing and was in some respects better than the two western sites under
consideration.27 Phillips concurred and
directed the Group for Lunar Exploration Planning to assess the
scientific merit of the site.28
On June 17 the Site Selection Subgroup of the Group for Lunar
Exploration Planning met at Houston to try to reduce the complexity of
lunar exploration planning. MSC's operations planners needed definite
recommendations as to scientific objectives and priorities rather than
the unstructured group of sites currently being considered. A short list
of high-priority sites was desired, which would not subsequently be
changed except through formal change procedures. MSC engineers briefed
the subgroup on the increased capabilities that might be expected for
the exploration missions. After Apollo 11, four "H" missions
were planned, each of which would be able to carry a complete Apollo
lunar surface experiments package (ALSEP), could support two periods of
surface activity by the astronauts, and would be targeted for a smaller
landing zone than the first mission.* On the later "H" missions
engineers expected to be able to land within a 1-kilometer (0.62-mile)
circle. After the "H" missions, six "J" missions
would be flown. These could land with considerably improved accuracy,
stay on the surface for three days and allow four excursions to the
surface, and carry scientific equipment in the service module for lunar-
orbital experiments. Starting with the second or third "J"
mission, a powered surface vehicle would extend the astronauts' radius
of operations to about 5 kilometers (3 miles).29
With these developments in mind, the subgroup reduced the list of
candidate sites to 10, ordering them in a sequence that would produce
the best scientific return, and added five more representing lunar
features of scientific interest not covered by the existing fist. It
recommended systematic photography from the orbiting command and service
module to provide the necessary planning data for later missions.
Finally, the subgroup recommended that Surveyor III be
deleted from further consideration for the second landing because its
location was not expected to yield data significantly different from the
two eastern sites already picked for Apollo 11.30
The Site Selection Board met again on July 10 for a briefing on the aims
of lunar exploration. Donald Wise of the Lunar Exploration Office
discussed the types of information the scientists hoped to get from the
lunar exploration program: the ages of lunar materials, their chemical
composition, clues to the processes that have created lunar landforms,
the interior structure of the moon, and the rate of flow of heat from
its interior. Farouk El-Baz of Bellcomm described the general areas that
should be sampled in the first phase (10 missions) of lunar exploration:
two types of mare material ("older" or "eastern" and
"younger" or "western"); regional stratigraphic
units such as deposits around mare basins; impact craters in both maria
and highlands; morphological manifestations of volcanic activity in both
mafia and highlands; and areas that might give clues as to the nature
and extent of processes other than impact and volcanism which may have
acted on the lunar surface. He then enumerated the characteristics of
each of the 10 landing sites proposed by the Group for Lunar Exploration
Planning, relating each to the scientific goals of the program and tying
the sequence to expected improvements in spacecraft capabilities and
flight operations planning.
Chairman Phillips remarked that the list seemed well thought out and
that a short list of desirable science sites must soon be stabilized.
After considerable discussion, the Board approved the 10 candidate sites
for planning purposes. Phillips directed MSC to study these sites and
report on their suitability.
Houston had already taken a quick look at the sites and determined that
all would require additional photographs before they could be certified
under existing criteria. Photography from the Apollo 10 command module -
conducted specifically to evaluate its usefulness for filling gaps in
Lunar Orbiter coverage - had proved adequate for site analysis, and
MSC's data indicated that by proper choice of sites for early missions,
photographs of many of the later ones could be obtained. According to
MSC's studies, the Surveyor III site offered better
opportunities for this "bootstrap" photography than the other
western locations on the list.31
Two months' work by the Apollo Site Selection Board did not finally
determine where each Apollo exploration mission would go. It reduced the
scope of the debate somewhat, established the principle that changes
were to be made only for good scientific reasons, and provided the means
for accommodating changes as the program developed. The list of 10 sites
approved in July provided specific targets for mission planners; it
would change as operational problems arose and as improved equipment and
techniques became available.
Lunar Landing Sites Recommended for Consideration as of June 1969.**
Site Latitude Longitude
Deg Min Deg Min
==== === === === ===
Censorinus 0 17 S 32 39 E
Rima Littrow 21 25 N 28 56 E
Abulfeda 14 50 S 14 00 E
Rima Hyginus 7 52 N 6 07 E
Tycho 41 08 S 11 35 W
Copernicus Peak 9 36 N 19 53 W
Copernicus Wall 10 22 N 19 59 W
Schroter's Valley 24 36 N 49 03 W
Marius F 15 10 N 56 31 W
Fra Mauro 3 45 S 17 36 W
Mosting C 1 55 S 8 03 W
Hipparchus 4 36 S 3 40 E
Gassendi 17 50 W 40 20 W
Dionysius 2 31 N 17 49 E
Alexander 37 46 N 14 06 E
Alphonsus 13 35 S 4 11 W
Rima Bode II 12 47 N 3 49 W
Copernicus CD 6 32 N 14 58 W
Tobias Mayer P 13 18 N 31 11 W
Aristarchus 24 24 N 47 50 W
* The landing zone for Apollo 11 was
about 19 kilometers long and 5 kilometers wide (12 by 3 miles) as a
result of uncertainties in the determination of the spacecraft's
position and velocity in lunar orbit before landing.
** From minutes of the Apollo Site
Selection Board meeting, June 3, 1969.
20. J. O. Cappelari, Jr., ed.,
"Where on the Moon? An Apollo Systems Engineering Problem,"
The Bell System Technical Journal 51 (1972): 976-84.
21. John R. Sevier interview, Apr. 24,
1986.
22. MA/Apollo Program Dir. to multiple
addressees, "Minutes of the Apollo Site Selection Board Meeting of
June 3, 1969."
23. Ibid.
24. Ibid.; Benjamin Milwitzky to Dir.,
Apollo Lunar Exploration Office, "Biasing Apollo Missions to Land
Near Surveyor Spacecraft on the Moon," Jan. 10, 1969.
25. Minutes of the Apollo Site Selection
Board Meeting, June 3, 1969; Owen E. Maynard to Mgr., Apollo Spacecraft
Program, "Apollo Site Selection Board trip report - June 3,
1969," with encl., "Lunar Landing Site Recommendations for
Apollo 12 as Presented to Apollo Site Selection Board June 3,
1969," June 10, 1969.
26. Minutes of the Apollo Site Selection
Board Meeting, June 3, 1969.
27. George M. Low to NASA Hqs., attn.:
S. C. Phillips, TWX, "Lunar Landing Sites for H-1 Mission,"
June 12, 1969.
28. Phillips to MSC, attn.: G. Low, TWX,
"Lunar Landing Sites for H-1 Mission," June 16, 1969.
29. N. W. Hinners to Captain L. R.
Scherer, "Second Mission Landing Sites," June 18, 1969;
Hinners to Group for Lunar Exploration Planning and Site Selection
Subgroup, "Fourth GLEP Site Selection Subgroup Meeting - June 17,
1969," June 23, 1969; Hinners to file, "GLEP Site Selection
Subgroup, Fourth Meeting, June 17, 1969," Aug. 4, 1969.
30. Hinners, "Fourth GLEP Site
Selection Subgroup Meeting - June 17, 1969."
31. Minutes of the Apollo Site Selection
Board Meeting, July 10, 1969.
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