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APOLLO'S LUNAR EXPLORATION PLANS
Site Selection: Ranger, Surveyor, Lunar Orbiter
The visible face of the moon offered scores of interesting sites for
scientific exploration. As far back as 1961, Harold Urey, responding to
a question from Homer Newell, listed five general regions of high
scientific interest: high latitudes, to determine whether water might
exist where temperature extremes were less marked; two maria, to
determine whether they were of different composition; inside a large
crater; near one of the great wrinkles in the maria; and in a
mountainous area. Assuming that equatorial sites would draw the most
attention anyway, Urey offered no suggestions concerning them.54 Eugene Shoemaker noted not long afterward that
scientific objectives would be subordinate to operational requirements,
at least on the early missions, and that the sites most operationally
suitable for an Apollo landing - level, featureless maria, most likely -
would be the least suited to determination of geologic relationships.55
Operations planning for the earliest Apollo missions was designed to
assure the safe return of the astronauts. The spacecraft, still attached
to the Saturn upper stage, would be inserted into an earth-circling
"parking orbit" so that mission control could verify that all
systems were working properly. Lunar landings were to be made in direct
sunlight and at specific times of the lunar day chosen for optimum
visibility; return to earth must take place in daylight; and allowance
would be made for possible interference with communication caused by
solar activity.56 These rules, along
with constraints on the lunar orbit of the command module, defined a
landing zone along the moon's equator within which the first mission
would have to land.
Equally important for selecting a landing site was the nature of the
lunar surface - how much weight it could support and how many rocks and
small craters were present. For this purpose, high-resolution
photographs of the lunar surface were required, which were to be
supplied initially by the Ranger spacecraft [see Chapter 2]. To supplement Ranger's
photographs and also to provide direct information about the surface, a
second unmanned spacecraft, Surveyor, would be built. One version would
soft-land on the moon and transmit scientific data and television
pictures; a second version would be an orbiter that would circle the
moon, photographing large portions of its surface. But when Apollo
engineers specified the detail required for their purposes, the Surveyor
orbiter as then defined could not meet them.57
To supply the high-resolution photographs needed to certify landing
sites, both OMSF and OSSA endorsed a new lunar-orbiting spacecraft.
Preliminary studies indicated that the project was feasible, and after
briefly considering giving the orbiter to the Jet Propulsion Laboratory,
Headquarters officials decided to assign it to Langley Research Center.
By the end of August 1963 Langley had drawn up specifications for the
spacecraft and camera system and called for bids. Before the year ended,
project officials had selected the Boeing Company as the prime
contractor. Boeing proposed a solar-powered satellite,
attitude-stabilized in three axes, carrying a film camera system
designed by the Eastman Kodak Company. Film was to be developed aboard
the spacecraft and the images were to be transmitted to earth by an
optical scanning and telemetry system. Five photographic missions were
planned; the first Lunar Orbiter would be ready for flight less than
three years after the contract was let.58
In Ranger and Surveyor, the two projects that contributed most to early
Apollo site selection, the Manned Spacecraft Center had worked closely
with the Jet Propulsion Laboratory to coordinate Apollo's requirements
with mission plans [see Chapter 6].59 As late as 1964, no single organization
was responsible for collecting the data needed to evaluate Apollo
landing sites and recommending the final choice for each mission.60 In mid-1965, acting on a recommendation from
Bellcomm, Inc.,* George Mueller
formally established an Apollo Site Selection Board to evaluate and
recommend landing sites for the Apollo missions. Chaired by the Apollo
program manager in the Office of Manned Space Flight, the board would
weigh all available scientific and operational considerations and
recommend landing sites to MueIler.61
As planning for lunar science progressed during the middle 1960s, three
key issues emerged: management of the returned lunar samples, selecting
and training astronauts for scientific exploration, and the choice of
landing sites.
* Bellcomm, Inc., was a
systems-engineering organization created in 1962 by the American
Telephone & Telegraph Co. at NASA's request for the' purpose of
conducting independent analyses of many aspects of the Apollo program.
It employed about 500 people at peak strength (1969). In 1972, its work
for NASA completed, Bellcomm was merged with Bell Laboratories. J. O.
Cappellari, Jr., "Where on the Moon? An Apollo Systems Engineering
Problem," The Bell System Technical Journal 51 (5) (1972):
955.
54. Harold C. Urey to Newell, June 19,
1961.
55. Shoemaker, "Exploration of the
Moon's Surface," American Scientist 50 (1962): 121.
56. Ted H. Skopinski to Chief, Systems
Integration Div., "Selection of Lunar Landing Site for the Early
Apollo Lunar Missions," Mar. 21, 1962.
57. Bruce K. Byers, Destination
Moon: A History of the Lunar Orbiter Program, NASA TM X-3487
(Washington, 1977), pp. 9-15.
58. Ibid., pp. 19-47, 67-69, 75-78, 227.
59. Gilruth to Mueller, Aug. 5, 1965.
60. T. H. Thompson to G. E. Mueller and
Gen. S. C. Phillips, Dec. 23, 1964.
61. Mueller to multiple addressees,
"Establishment of Apollo Site Selection Board," July 1, 1965.
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