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DESTINATION MOON: A History of the
Lunar Orbiter Program
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- CHAPTER XI: CONCLUSIONS: LUNAR
ORBITER'S CONTRIBUTION TO SPACE EXPLORATION
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- Apollo Mission Planning and
Lunar Orbiter Data
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- [308] The Apollo
Program was the primary user of Lunar Orbiter data in the months
following each Orbiter mission and in the period between the final
mission and the first manned landing on the Moon in 1969. The
story behind the Apollo site selection activities is beyond the
scope of this history, but a brief summary of Lunar Orbiter's part
in Apollo mission planning will demonstrate the role that
[309]
the Lunar Orbiter Program played in the Apollo Program as a result
of cooperation between the Office of Space Science and
Applications and the Office of Manned Space Flight.
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- The Apollo Site Selection Board (ASSB) had
begun its work at its first meeting on March 16, 1966. No Lunar
Orbiter or Surveyor spacecraft had yet flown, and therefore, all
discussion of site selection requirements had depended upon Ranger
and Earth-based telescopic photography. Lunar Orbiter would soon
change Apollo Program thinking about landing sites. At the first
ASSB meeting the members identified a number of potential sites
with the expectation that the sites finally chosen would be among
them.12
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- By the following ASSB meeting
Surveyor I had successfully landed on the Moon in Oceanus
Procellarum, north of the crater Flamsteed. The first Lunar
Orbiter mission, scheduled for early August, would attempt to
photograph the Surveyor. Lunar Orbiter Program officials would
adjust the positions of sites A-9 and A-10 to combine two blocks
of photography for greater surface coverage of the area in which
the unmanned spacecraft had touched down. In addition to this
change in the first Lunar Orbiter missions Norman Crabill and
Thomas Young of the Lunar Orbiter Project Office, Langley, on June
1 [310] presented the ASSB meeting recommendations for
Lunar Orbiter Mission B. They believed that each Mission B site
contained areas smooth enough to qualify as candidate Apollo
sites. Finally the Apollo Program representatives, after reviewing
the target sites for Lunar Orbiter Missions A and B. concluded
that these sites would satisfy all known requirements for the
Apollo missions if the surface of the Moon proved hospitable at
each one.13
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- At the June 1 meeting Oran W. Nicks of
OSSA asked Apollo Program people if they had any requirements for
lunar landmarks which Orbiter could photograph. Owen E. Maynard of
the Manned Spacecraft Center, who had presented the Apollo Site
Selection Plan to the meeting, replied that the program had no
plan at the time to use landmarks for updating orbits of the
Apollo spacecraft. However, it would be desirable if such landmark
sites could be located within a block of Orbiter photography
containing a proposed Apollo landing site.14
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- By the December 15 ASSB meeting
Lunar Orbiter I had obtained medium-resolution stereo photography
of nine potential Apollo landing sites. Lunar Orbiter II had
photographed thirteen potential sites in medium-resolution
[311]
stereo and high-resolution monoscopic photography. Lawrence Rowan
of the United States Geological Survey interpreted to those
present the data of the lunar surface with respect to impact
craters, volcanic fields, and mass wasting of the top layer of the
Moon's soil. He made the following points in his talk:
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- 1. Older mare areas such as those in
Lunar Orbiter II photographs of Site II P-6 do not have the problem
of crusts and lava tubes as young areas such as Site II P-2 most
likely have.
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- 2. Surveyor
I photographs in Oceanus
Procellarum exhibit more surface rocks than are found in Sinus
Medii and Mare Tranquillitatis, suggesting that it might be
younger and have a thin surface layer.
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- 3. Slopes in older highland and smoothed
mare craters, which show "patterned grounds" may be unstable, with
collapse or landslide dangers.15
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- Analysts for the Lunar Orbiter and Apollo
Programs had chosen nine sites from Lunar Orbiter I photography and had applied Apollo site selection
criteria in the effort to find Lunar Module landing areas. The
December 15 ASSB meeting reviewed the results. Twenty-three areas
proved large enough to contain a landing ellipse. These were
undergoing further study, [312] and Apollo
Program personnel evaluating them would make detailed crater
counts of each during the next stage of selection. Following the
preliminary analysis eight of the twenty-three areas merited
special study.16 The process of screening the Lunar Orbiter data is
given in the diagram on the next page.
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- Landing site data determined from further
analyses of Orbiter photography brought more confirmation that the
Lunar Module design was correct and offered sufficient capability
to land on the Moon. At a March 30, 1967, meeting of the ASSB,
Donald C. Cheatham from the Manned Spacecraft Center pointed out
that "the LM redesignation capability permits a change of
touchdown point of 10,000 feet crosstrack at high gate (90 feet
per second delta V. command at 30,000 feet down range). Visibility
restrictions do not permit uprange redesignation. Preliminary
examination of the Lunar Orbiter photography indicate that this
capability will be sufficient for crater
avoidance."17 Already Lunar Orbiter had told Apollo mission
planners much about the areas where they could and could not send
a Lunar Module.
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[313] (DIAGRAM)
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- PRELIMINARY SCREENING
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- [314] Finally, the
December 15, 1967, meeting of the ASSB at Houston had the
photographic data of all five Lunar Orbiters upon which to base
its judgments. The major criteria for selection of the landing
sites subsequently depended upon performance constraints of the
Apollo spacecraft, particularly the Lunar
Module.18 Lunar Orbiter had provided the photographic data
which the Apollo Program had originally requested. Surveyor data
continued to come in from three landed spacecraft in the Apollo
zone of interest. Two more Surveyors would land in different areas
of the Moon before that program concluded operations. Beyond this
Lunar Orbiter photography did not constitute a major basis for the
final selection of Apollo landing sites. Selection had to depend
upon performance constraints of the Lunar Module. At this point
Lunar Orbiter had fulfilled its primary mission for the Apollo
Manned Lunar Landing Program.
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- A year later, after the first Apollo
mission to orbit the Moon, Apollo
8 Astronaut James A. Lovell, Jr.,
reported:
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- . . . . the Lunar Orbiter photographs
which we had on board were quite adequate. There was no problem at
all in determining objects, particularly on the near side of the
moon. There are suitable landing sites. They are very easily
distinguished. We could pick them up. We could work our way in . .
. . The Lunar Orbiter photos again were helpful . . . to check the
craters on the back side.19
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