|
Images
Audio Clips
Video Clips
Movies
Documents
|
 |

MISSION AND SCIENCE PLANNING
Operational Constraints on Landing Sites
Picking a spot where a lunar module could land was a complex exercise
requiring tradeoffs among dozens of factors. Predominant among these
were the topography and texture of the lunar surface and the
requirements of the lunar module's guidance and navigation system. Other
restrictions included the elevation of the sun at the landing site; the
temperature of the lunar surface; the radiation environment in space and
on the moon; and the earth lighting conditions desired for launch and
recovery.3 The most restrictive mission
rule, so far as landing sites for the earliest lunar landing missions
were concerned, was the requirement to place the spacecraft on a
"free-return" trajectory - a flight path that allowed for
failure of the service module's main engine. If the service module
engine should fail to put the spacecraft into lunar orbit, the joined
CSM and LM would loop around the moon under the influence of lunar
gravity alone and head back to earth. This free-return trajectory
required the spacecraft to leave earth orbit on a path that would bring
it to the moon within five degrees of latitude of the lunar equator. As
early as mid-1963 MSC's Space Environment Division selected four sites
from a list compiled by various lunar scientists, balancing scientific
interest against this mission rule. A few months later five more sites
were picked for preliminary trajectory studies.4
The choice of lunar longitude for a landing site depended mainly on two
considerations. To land at a predetermined site it was essential to
determine the position and the flight path of the lunar landing craft as
accurately as possible before beginning the final descent to the
surface. Navigational sightings taken from the spacecraft on stars or on
lunar surface landmarks provided the data from which ground-based
computers determined the spacecraft's orbit and calculated the necessary
course corrections. Accurate calculation of the orbit required the
astronauts to take sightings on five prominent lunar landmarks some
distance east of the landing site, and since the spacecraft went behind
the moon on the west and was out of radio and radar contact with earth
until it emerged around the eastern edge, those sightings could only be
taken after earth contact was reestablished. The position of the
navigational landmarks had to be known with an error of no more than
1,500 feet (450 meters). In mid-1963 this was not possible; at the
eastern and western edges of the visible face, surface features might
actually be as much as 6,000 feet (1,800 meters) from where the best
lunar maps showed them. In light of these navigation requirements, early
planning assumed that a landing could be plotted no farther east than 40
degrees east longitude. The "Apollo landing zone" thus defined
extended to 40 degrees west longitude; other operational considerations
made a more westerly landing undesirable.5
The second limitation on the longitude of the landing site was the
elevation of the sun at the time of landing, which was the major factor
considered in choosing the time of launch. To the pilot looking for a
safe spot to land within the time the lunar module could hover, it was
vital that the sun be high enough in the lunar sky to highlight the
surface topography without casting long, confusing shadows, but not so
high that all surface detail was washed out. After landing, the lunar
explorers would also be hindered by a low or high sun. The moon has no
atmosphere to scatter light and therefore shadows are completely black;
at either low or high sun angles, visual observations can be difficult.
Furthermore, solar heating of the lunar surface varies with sun angle,
complicating the problem of protecting the astronauts and the spacecraft
against extreme temperatures. Conditions would be best when the sun was
15 to 45 degrees above the horizon. Mission planners could choose a
launch time so that the lunar module would land at a time when solar
illumination was near optimum. Launch time was subject to the further
constraint, however, that lunar missions had to leave the launch pad
well before last light in case an aborted launch required emergency
recovery operations.6
Two potential hazards to the lunar mission were more difficult to take
into account: meteoroids and radiation. In 1963 no one knew how
dangerous meteoroids were. It seemed prudent to avoid the predictable
(and dense) swarms that recur annually, but the earth-moon system
constantly encounters a smaller number of randomly distributed
meteoroids. The last three test flights of the Saturn I launch vehicle
carried meteoroid-detecting satellites into earth orbit to determine how
serious this hazard might be. Radiation (subatomic particles, x-rays,
and gamma rays) was more worrisome. Of special concern were the
high-energy protons shot out from the sun during major solar flares,
which could subject astronauts on the lunar surface to lethal doses of
radiation.7 Solar flares were more
troublesome because they are completely unpredictable. Protection was
extremely difficult and warning all but impossible: by the time a flare
could be detected on earth and its magnitude assessed, the most
energetic (and dangerous) particles would already have reached the moon.
Within the zone defined by all these constraints - roughly 185 miles
(300 kilometers) wide, stretching l,500 miles (2,400 kilometers) along
the moon's equator - geologic factors would determine the choice of a
landing site. Surface topography could not be known in any detail until
Ranger and Surveyor provided information; but from lunar maps available
in 1963, several landing areas*
about 400 square miles (900 square kilometers) in size could be picked
out where slopes apparently were not too great and craters not too
numerous. Balancing the need to pick landing areas near the center of
the moon (where lunar maps were most accurate) against the requirement
to spread the areas as far as possible along the equator (which allowed
maximum flexibility in launch dates), MSC's Space Environment Division
found 10 landing areas that seemed promising enough to warrant
reconnoitering by unmanned spacecraft and close scrutiny by mission
planners. The areas were spotted in a zone extending from the
southeastern edge of Mare Tranquillitatis (not far from where Apollo 11
would eventually land) to a point northeast of Flamsteed crater in
Oceanus Procellarum (some 375 miles [600 kilometers] west of Apollo 12's
touchdown point). Even among these, however, none was completely
satisfactory with respect to all the known constraints.8
The effect of all these restrictions on the landing site was to reduce
drastically the number of consecutive days per month on which a lunar
mission could be launched. Considering only the two most important
factors - sun angle and surface temperature - a given site could be
reached only if the spacecraft were launched during a 2.3-day period
each month. Experience to 1963 indicated that launch operations stood a
good chance of being interrupted and launches postponed because of
systems problems, and no one was willing to count on launching an Apollo
mission within 2.3 days. But if flight planners could be prepared to
land at more than one site for each launch - changing to a more westerly
target if launch delays prevented reaching the first site - the number
of consecutive days on which a launch was possible could be
substantially increased. A Bellcomm study in early 1964 pointed out that
choosing multiple sites for each launch would make the program
considerably more flexible, though it would require certifying more
sites through the Surveyor and Lunar Orbiter programs. That, however,
might cost no more than postponing a few launches by a month each.9
The greatest uncertainty in the program at that time, pointed up by all
these early studies, was the physical nature of the moon's surface.
Astronomers held widely different views of what a lunar module would
encounter when it touched down. Gerald Kuiper of the University of
Arizona, one of the principal investigators in the Ranger project, was
convinced that the surface was firm, though it might be unconsolidated
and might be covered by a thin layer of dust. Cornell University
astronomer Thomas Gold asserted, however, that the apparently smooth
areas on the moon were likely to be covered with a layer of fine dust
several meters thick, raising the prospect that the lunar module might
sink out of sight with only a short-lived dust cloud to mark its
disappearance.10 There was the further
possibility that the surface might be so cluttered with boulders and
pitted with small craters that the lander would find no level spot large
enough to land - or if it tried to land, would turn over or come to rest
tilted at an angle that made return to orbit difficult.
NASA had been hoping that Ranger's television photographs would shed
light on these questions, but by the end of 1963 Ranger had experienced
its fifth failure in as many attempts and was undergoing a critical
reappraisal. [see Chapter 2] 11 Spacecraft engineers at Houston's Manned
Spacecraft Center, meanwhile, in spite of their real need for this
information in designing the lunar landing module, had to go ahead
without it.12 Lunar Orbiter, still in
the early stages, would have to provide the information that mission
planners needed for site selection. The spacecraft builders could only
hope that data from Surveyor, when they got it, would not force them to
revise their design too drastically.
* A landing area was a fairly large
segment of the lunar surface which appeared sufficiently level and
smooth to permit landing; a landing site was an ellipse a few hundred
meters in size within which the lunar module would actually touch down.
A site would be picked for exact targeting after the hazards of the
landing area had been assessed.
3. MSC, "Environmental Factors
Involved in the Choice of Lunar Operational Dates and the Choice of
Lunar Landing Sites," NASA Project Apollo Working Paper (AWP) No.
1100, Nov. 22, 1963. In 1972 an entire number of The Bell System
Technical Journal (vol. 51, no. 5, pp. 955-1127) was devoted to a
single article, "Where on the Moon? An Apollo Systems Engineering
Problem," J. O. Cappellari, Jr., ed. This is a narrative
description of the many factors that entered into the choice of an
Apollo landing site, how the factors were weighted, and how the
interaction of those factors changed as experience with Apollo systems
accumulated. It is not so technical as to be incomprehensible to most
readers. Not surprisingly, it lays considerable emphasis on the role of
Bellcomm, Inc., in the site selection process.
4. AWP 1100, p. 23.
5. Ibid., p. 32.
6. Ibid., pp. 7-13.
7. Ibid., pp. 6-7.
8. Ibid., p. 33.
9. W. E. Thompson (Bellcomm, Inc.),
"Lunar Landing Site Constraints: The Arguments for and Against One
Preselected Site Versus Several Sites," Jan. 31, 1964.
10. Benjamine J. Garland, memo for
Apollo proj. off., "Characteristics of the Lunar Surface,"
Aug. 14, 1961; Thomas Gold, "Structure of the Moon's Surface,"
in J. W. Salisbury and P. E. Glaser, eds., The Lunar Surface
Layer (London: Academic Press, 1964), pp. 345-53. Gold
interpreted radar, optical, and thermal properties of the lunar surface
as indicating a layer of fine particles up to several meters thick whose
mechanical properties would be difficult to predict. He suggested that
at the very least a lunar landing would be compromised by blinding
clouds of dust raised by the exhaust from the descent engine. In the
popular press, Gold's hypothesis was taken to mean that a lunar module
could sink out of sight. The pictures returned by Ranger 7
(July 1964) gave Gold no reason to change his thinking; see R. Cargill
Hall, Lunar Impact: A History of Project Ranger, NASA
SP-4210 (Washington, 1977), p.285; also Gold, "Ranger Moon
Pictures; Implications," Science 145 (1964): 1046-48.
Most Ranger scientists agreed that the TV pictures from Ranger
7 gave no basis for drawing conclusions about the load-bearing
characteristics of the surface. They did give some useful information
about the distribution and size of craters and the slopes of lunar
terrain on a smaller scale than had been possible. Gold remarked after
the conclusion of Ranger that its pictures were like mirrors:
"everyone sees his own theories reflected in them." Hall,
Lunar Impact, p. 309. For a bibliography of studies on the
lunar surface up to the first successful Ranger mission, see J. W.
Salisbury, ed., Bibliography of Lunar and Planetary Research -
1960-1964, AFCRL-66-52, U.S. Air Force Office of Aerospace
Research, Cambridge Research Laboratories, Jan. 1966.
11. Hall, Lunar Impact, pp.
156-82.
12. Courtney G. Brooks, James M.
Grimwood, and Loyd S. Swenson, Jr.,
Chariots for Apollo: A History of Manned Lunar Spacecraft,
NASA SP-4205 (Washington, 1979), pp. 150-54.
|