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APOLLO'S LUNAR EXPLORATION PLANS
Woods Hole and Falmouth Conferences, Summer 1965
In the summer of 1965 the Space Science Board again convened a
conference to consider NASA's plans for space research. The Iowa summer
study three years before had reviewed current programs and recommended
changes of emphasis; the 1965 study at Woods Hole, Massachusetts, was
charged with recommending directions and priorities for the next 10 to
20 years. The major topics considered were lunar and planetary
exploration, astronomy, and the role of humans in space exploration.42 The Woods Hole conference report made
many detailed recommendations in individual areas of research. Space
research, the study found, required the use of ground-based observations
as well as satellites, sounding rockets, and balloons. Throughout, the
report stressed balance: between manned and unmanned
programs, between lunar and planetary exploration, and between
ground-based studies and research in space. The salient conclusions of
the study were easily summarized. Planetary exploration was judged to be
the most rewarding scientific objective for the post-Apollo period, with
Mars being the most interesting target. Concerning humans in space, the
participants agreed that "The distinction between manned and unmanned
programs is an artificial one; scientific objectives should be the
determining factors." But before people could be dispatched on missions
to the planets, "an orbiting research facility for the study of
long-term effects of space flight is essential."43
The 1965 conference was somewhat more sanguine than the 1962 study
concerning the role of humans in space science and somewhat more
tolerant of the Apollo program. The working group on the role of man
noted that
Few ... scientists would attempt to justify the entire
cost of developing manned space flight solely on the basis of its
"scientific value;" however, most scientists would agree that this
capability, when developed, should be utilized for scientific purposes
whenever it seems possible to do so.
The group did not concede that people could be replaced by instruments
in every imaginable case:
Manned intervention [in an unmanned system] increases
reliability through the possibility of extending the lifetime of
spaceborne equipment almost indefinitely by means of repair and
replacement. . . . Man greatly increases the flexibility of the system,
for he can decide [how best] to use an instrument [and] can make
alterations or improvements in the instrument itself. Data transmission
can . . . be virtually eliminated for manned experiments, and the design
of an instrument can be simplified. . . .
Not only that, but
if the presence of man in the system were already
considered essential, the scientist would assign many scientific tasks
to man because of the greater reliability and flexibility he would bring
to the system.44
On the question of selection and training of scientists for space
missions, the scientists were of much the same mind as those in 1962:
For some tasks - those requiring scientific insight -
it would seem better to have a scientist possessing judgment,
experience, and imagination and to train him as an astronaut to the
extent required.
Again conceding that test pilots had the edge in some areas, the working
group nonetheless concluded that
the astronaut selection and training program [should]
take into account progress in manned space flight. Successes so far* may be viewed as evidence that it
may be possible to relax the present high physical standards at a pace
faster than has yet been contemplated.45
Concerning the lunar exploration program, the Woods Hole study report
confined itself to defining the major scientific questions in lunar
exploration. Three basic problems should be explored: structure and
processes of the lunar interior, the composition and structure of the
moon's surface and the processes that have modified it, and the sequence
of events by which the moon has arrived at its present configuration. As
guidelines for exploring these problems, the report listed 15 specific
scientific questions that should direct lunar exploration, both manned
and unmanned [see Appendix 3].46
One question that assumed increasing importance as planetary exploration
became more realistic was the existence of life forms or their
precursors on the moon or the planets. The working group on biology
concluded that the evolution of organisms or prebiotic materials was
most likely to have occurred on Mars. However, the group affirmed the
necessity to avoid contaminating any celestial body, including the moon,
with terrestrial organisms or organic materials that might invalidate
later experiments attempting to detect life. As to the need for
protecting earth from biological contamination by material from the
moon, the group believed the hazards were small but that NASA should be
safe rather than sorry: "the consequences of misjudgment are potentially
catastrophic."47 Opinion on this point
was not unanimous throughout the conference, however, for the working
group on lunar exploration noted only a "minor possibility of finding
prebiotic material, either buried or in sheltered locations."48
The Woods Hole conference was, as far as Apollo was concerned, a
policy-setting meeting. When it adjourned, many of the participants
stayed on at nearby Falmouth for a two-week conference dealing with
details of lunar exploration and science on Apollo. The Falmouth
conference elaborated on the previous year's work of the Apollo lunar
science planning teams in light of plans for manned space flight for the
10 years following the first Apollo landing. As plans then stood, the
first few landings - the exact number was not certain - comprised the
Apollo program; it was assumed that these landings would be minimal
missions to establish confidence in the Apollo systems. They were to be
followed by flights using improved spacecraft that could carry larger
payloads and stay longer on the lunar surface.** Ultimately, perhaps in the last few years
of the post-Apollo period, a lunar base might be available for
scientific studies. Falmouth planners structured their discussions
around this idealized schedule.49
At Falmouth, members of the lunar science planning teams collaborated
with NASA and academic scientists to take the first steps in detailed
scientific operations planning. As specifically as they could,
disciplinary working groups laid out their requirements for procedures
and equipment. For the first time, an astronaut in training described
the mission's essential constraints from the astronaut's point of view,
stressing the limitations of space suits, life-support equipment, and
operational contingencies (such as an aborted landing).50 For some scientists this was the first time
they had had to consider their own experiments in the context of other
scientific work and operational restrictions, and one participant
reported a noticeable change in attitudes as the discussions
progressed.51
In its final report the Falmouth conference summarized its
recommendations for the early landings, the "post-Apollo" (advanced)
missions, and the more distant future when a lunar base could be
contemplated [see Appendix 3]. Highest priority on the early
landings was assigned to returning the greatest number and variety of
samples as feasible; emplacement of long-lived surface instruments was
next, followed by geologic exploration of the landing area by the
astronauts. The early missions could only sample isolated areas of the
lunar surface. A survey of the entire moon, plus detailed studies of the
equatorial belt, should be the objective of later missions. These
advanced missions, five or six landings flown at the rate of one or two
per year, should be supported by an unmanned logistics system that would
land additional consumable supplies and scientific equipment. Crews
might stay as long as 14 days and explore as far as 15 kilometers (9
miles) from the landing site. The additional equipment should include
some analytical instruments for on-the-spot discriminatory tests on
lunar material, so that astronauts could select a wider variety of
samples. Surface transportation should be provided - a wheeled vehicle
with a range of 8 to 15 kilometers (5 to 9 miles) and a flying vehicle
that could carry 135 kilograms (300 pounds) of instruments from point to
point over a 15-kilometer range. With the flying unit, astronauts could
secure samples from otherwise inaccessible locations, such as a crater
wall.52
Falmouth provided the best scientific advice NASA could get at the time,
and its recommendations formed the basis for the earliest mission
planning. It was the first of several iterations of scientific planning
that would take place during the rest of the Apollo program. NASA would
make every effort to carry out as much of the program as could be done
within a changing context of available resources. Progress often seemed
intolerably slow to some scientists,53
but in the end a gratifying proportion of the Falmouth recommendations
would appear in mission plans.
* Four successful manned flights had
been made in the past three years, including two of the two-man Gemini
spacecraft.
** In 1965 plans for manned space
flight after Apollo were still in the formative stage. OMSF had
conducted several studies on "Apollo Extension Systems" to determine how
far the propulsion, life-support, and electrical power systems on the
Apollo spacecraft could be upgraded without major redesign. These
"extended Apollo" components would be used in missions - earth- and
lunar-orbital flights as well as lunar surface missions, lasting from 10
to 45 days - that would sustain the manned program until the next major
program could be defined. See W. David Compton and Charles D. Benson,
Living and Working in Space: A History of Skylab, NASA SP-4208
(Washington, 1983), Chaps. 1, 3, and 5; also George Mueller's
presentations to the House and Senate space committees in the NASA
authorization hearings for fiscal 1966 and 1967.
42. National Academy of
Sciences-National Research Council, Space Research: Directions for
the Future, report of a study by the Space Science Board, Woods
Hole, Mass., 1965, NAS-NRC Publication 1402 (Washington, 1966), p. iii.
43. Ibid.
44. Ibid., pp. 623-26.
45. Ibid., pp. 628-29.
46. Ibid., pp. 5-34.
47. Ibid., pp. 486-93.
48. Ibid., p. 21.
49. NASA 1965 Summer Conference on
Lunar Exploration and Science, Falmouth, Massachusetts, July 19- 31,
1965, NASA SP-88 (Washington, 1965) , pp. 1, 7-19.
50. Ibid., pp. 59-393, 407-17.
51. Neal J. Smith to Allenby, 11 Aug.
1965.
52. NASA 1965 Summer
Conference, pp. 7-12, 16-19.
53. Shoemaker interview.
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