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Exploration of the Moon

The physical exploration of the Moon began when Luna 2, a space probe launched by the Soviet Union, made a deliberate impact on the surface of the Moon on September 14, 1959. Prior to that the only available means of exploration had been observation from Earth. The invention of the optical telescope brought about the first leap in the quality of lunar observations. Galileo Galilei is generally credited as the first person to use a telescope for astronomical purposes; having made his own telescope in 1609, the mountains and craters on the lunar surface were among his first observations using it.

Apollo 12 Lunar Module Intrepid prepares to descend towards the surface of the Moon. 1969 NASA photo by Richard F. Gordon Jr.

NASA's Apollo program was the only program to successfully land humans on the Moon, which it did six times. The first landing took place in 1969, when Apollo 11 astronauts Buzz Aldrin and Neil Armstrong left scientific instruments and returned lunar samples to Earth. Starting in 2025, NASA’s Artemis program plans to conduct further crewed lunar exploration missions.

The first soft landing on the far side of the Moon was made by the Chinese robotic spacecraft Chang'e 4 in early 2019, which successfully deployed the Yutu-2 robotic lunar rover. The first soft landing on the South Pole of the Moon was made by the Indian lander Vikram of Chandrayaan-3 in 2023, which successfully deployed the Pragyan rover.[1] [2]

Before spaceflight edit

The ancient Greek philosopher Anaxagoras, whose non-religious view of the heavens was one cause for his imprisonment and eventual exile,[3] reasoned that the Sun and Moon were both giant spherical rocks, and that the latter reflected the light of the former. Plutarch, in his book On the Face in the Moon's Orb, suggested that the Moon had deep recesses in which the light of the Sun did not reach and that the spots are nothing but the shadows of rivers or deep chasms. He also entertained the possibility that the Moon was inhabited. Aristarchus attempted to compute the Moon's size and distance from Earth, although his estimated distance of 20 times Earth's radius (which had been accurately determined by his contemporary Eratosthenes) proved to be about a third the actual average distance.

Chinese philosophers of the Han Dynasty believed the Moon to be energy equated to qi but recognized that the light of the Moon was a reflection of the Sun.[4] Mathematician and astrologer Jing Fang noted the sphericity of the Moon.[4] Shen Kuo of the Song Dynasty created an allegory equating the waxing and waning of the Moon to a round ball of reflective silver that, when doused with white powder and viewed from the side, would appear to be a crescent.[4]

Indian astronomer Aryabhata stated in his fifth-century text Aryabhatiya that reflected sunlight is what causes the Moon to shine.[5]

Persian astronomer Habash al-Hasib al-Marwazi conducted various observations at the Al-Shammisiyyah observatory in Baghdad between 825 and 835.[6] Using these observations, he estimated the Moon's diameter as 3,037 km (equivalent to 1,519 km radius) and its distance from the Earth as 346,345 km (215,209 mi).[6] In the 11th century, the Islamic physicist Alhazen investigated moonlight through a number of experiments and observations, concluding it was a combination of the Moon's own light and the Moon's ability to absorb and emit sunlight.[7][8]

By the Middle Ages, before the invention of the telescope, an increasing number of people began to recognise the Moon as a sphere, though many believed that it was "perfectly smooth".[9] In 1609, Galileo Galilei drew one of the first telescopic drawings of the Moon in his book Sidereus Nuncius and noted that it was not smooth but had mountains and craters. Later in the 17th century, Giovanni Battista Riccioli and Francesco Maria Grimaldi drew a map of the Moon and gave many craters the names they still have today. On maps, the dark parts of the Moon's surface were called maria (singular mare) or seas, and the light parts were called terrae or continents.

 
Galileo's sketches of the Moon from the groundbreaking Sidereus Nuncius

Thomas Harriot, as well as Galilei, drew the first telescopic representation of the Moon and observed it for several years. His drawings, however, remained unpublished.[10] The first map of the Moon was made by the Belgian cosmographer and astronomer Michael van Langren in 1645.[10] Two years later a much more influential effort was published by Johannes Hevelius. In 1647, Hevelius published Selenographia, the first treatise entirely devoted to the Moon. Hevelius's nomenclature, although used in Protestant countries until the eighteenth century, was replaced by the system published in 1651 by the Jesuit astronomer Giovanni Battista Riccioli, who gave the large naked-eye spots the names of seas and the telescopic spots (now called craters) the name of philosophers and astronomers.[10]

 
A study of the Moon from Robert Hooke's Micrographia, 1665

In 1753, the Croatian Jesuit and astronomer Roger Joseph Boscovich discovered the absence of atmosphere on the Moon. In 1824, Franz von Paula Gruithuisen explained the formation of craters as a result of meteorite strikes.[11]

The possibility that the Moon contains vegetation and is inhabited by selenites was seriously considered by major astronomers even into the first decades of the 19th century. In 1834–1836, Wilhelm Beer and Johann Heinrich Mädler published their four-volume Mappa Selenographica and the book Der Mond in 1837, which firmly established the conclusion that the Moon has no bodies of water nor any appreciable atmosphere.[12]

 
The earliest surviving daguerrotype of the Moon by John W. Draper (1840)
 
Photo of the Moon made by Lewis Rutherfurd in 1865

Space Race edit

The Cold War-inspired "space race" and "Moon race" between the Soviet Union and the United States of America accelerated with a focus on the Moon. This included many scientifically important firsts, such as the first photographs of the then-unseen far side of the Moon in 1959 by the Soviet Union, and culminated with the landing of the first humans on the Moon in 1969, widely seen around the world as one of the pivotal events of the 20th century and of human history in general.

 
The first picture of another world from space and of the Moon's far side, photographed by Luna 3 in 1959
 
Museum replica of Luna 1 and Luna 2
 
Scale model of Luna 3
 
First image of the Moon taken by a U.S. spacecraft,[13] Ranger 7 in July 1964
 
Block III Ranger probe
 
First photo ever taken from the surface of the Moon, by Luna 9 in February 1966
 
Luna 9 was the first spacecraft to achieve a landing on the Moon in February 1966.
 
Earthrise taken by William Anders of Apollo 8 in December 1968
 
1966 stamp with a drawing of the first soft landed probe Luna 9, next to the first view of the lunar surface photographed by the probe
 
Apollo 17 astronaut Harrison Schmitt standing next to a boulder at Taurus-Littrow during the third EVA (extravehicular activity)
 
Luna 16 first lunar sample return for the USSR in September 1970

The first artificial object to fly by the Moon was uncrewed Soviet probe Luna 1 on January 4, 1959, and went on to be the first probe to reach a heliocentric orbit around the Sun.[14] Few knew that Luna 1 was designed to impact the surface of the Moon.

The first probe to impact the surface of the Moon was the Soviet probe Luna 2, which made a hard landing on September 14, 1959, at 21:02:24 UTC. The far side of the Moon was first photographed on October 7, 1959, by the Soviet probe Luna 3. Though vague by today's standards, the photos showed that the far side of the Moon almost completely lacked maria.

The first American probe to fly by the Moon was Pioneer 4 on March 4, 1959, which occurred shortly after Luna 1. It was the only success of eight American probes that first attempted to launch for the Moon.[15]

In an effort to compete with these Soviet successes, U.S. President John F. Kennedy proposed the Moon landing in a Special Message to the Congress on Urgent National Needs:

Now it is time to take longer strides – time for a great new American enterprise – time for this nation to take a clearly leading role in space achievement, which in many ways may hold the key to our future on Earth.
...For while we cannot guarantee that we shall one day be first, we can guarantee that any failure to make this effort will make us last.

...I believe that this nation should commit itself to achieving the goal, before this decade is out, of landing a man on the Moon and returning him safely to the Earth. No single space project in this period will be more impressive to mankind, or more important in the long-range exploration of space; and none will be so difficult or expensive to accomplish.

...let it be clear that I am asking the Congress and the country to accept a firm commitment to a new course of action—a course which will last for many years and carry very heavy costs...[16] Full text  

Ranger 1 launched in August 1961, just three months after President Kennedy's speech. It would be three more years and six failed Ranger missions until Ranger 7 returned close up photos of the Lunar surface before impacting it in July 1964. A number of problems with launch vehicles, ground equipment, and spacecraft electronics plagued the Ranger program and early probe missions in general. These lessons helped in Mariner 2, the only successful U.S. space probe after Kennedy's famous speech to congress and before his death in November 1963.[17] U.S. success rates improved greatly from Ranger 7 onward.

In 1966, the USSR accomplished the first soft landings and took the first pictures from the lunar surface during the Luna 9 and Luna 13 missions.

The U.S. followed Ranger with the Surveyor program[18] sending seven robotic spacecraft to the surface of the Moon. Five of the seven spacecraft successfully soft-landed, investigating if the regolith (dust) was shallow enough for astronauts to stand on the Moon.

In September 1968 the Soviet Union's Zond 5 sent tortoises on a circumlunar mission, followed by turtles aboard Zond 6 in November. On December 24, 1968, the crew of Apollo 8Frank Borman, James Lovell and William Anders—became the first human beings to enter lunar orbit and see the far side of the Moon in person. Humans first landed on the Moon on July 20, 1969. The first humans to walk on the lunar surface were Neil Armstrong, commander of the U.S. mission Apollo 11 and his fellow astronaut Buzz Aldrin.

The first robot lunar rover to land on the Moon was the Soviet vessel Lunokhod 1 on November 17, 1970, as part of the Lunokhod programme. To date, the last human to stand on the Moon was Eugene Cernan, who as part of the Apollo 17 mission, walked on the Moon in December 1972.

Moon rock samples were brought back to Earth by three Luna missions (Luna 16, 20, and 24) and the Apollo missions 11 through 17 (except Apollo 13, which aborted its planned lunar landing). Luna 24 in 1976 was the last Lunar mission by either the Soviet Union or the U.S. until Clementine in 1994. Focus shifted to probes to other planets, space stations, and the Shuttle program.

Before the Moon race, the U.S. had pre-projects for scientific and military moonbases: the Lunex Project and Project Horizon. Besides crewed landings, the abandoned Soviet crewed lunar programs included the building of a multipurpose moonbase "Zvezda", the first detailed project, complete with developed mockups of expedition vehicles[19] and surface modules.[20]

After 1990 edit

 
Cassini–Huygens took this image during its lunar flyby, before it traveled to Saturn

Japan edit

In 1990, Japan visited the Moon with the Hiten spacecraft, becoming the third country to place an object in orbit around the Moon. The spacecraft released the Hagoromo probe into lunar orbit, but the transmitter failed, thereby preventing further scientific use of the spacecraft. In September 2007, Japan launched the SELENE spacecraft, with the objectives "to obtain scientific data of the lunar origin and evolution and to develop the technology for the future lunar exploration", according to the JAXA official website.[21]

In 2023, Smart Lander for Investigating Moon (SLIM) is a lunar lander mission of the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA). By 2017, the lander was planned to be launched in 2021, but this was delayed until 2023 due to delays in SLIM's ride-share mission, X-Ray Imaging and Spectroscopy Mission (XRISM). It was successfully launched on 6 September 2023 at 23:42 UTC (7 September 08:42 Japan Standard Time). On 1 October 2023, the lander executed its trans-lunar injection burn. It entered orbit around the Moon on 25 December 2023, and landed on 19 January 2024 at 15:20 UTC. As a result, Japan became the fifth country to soft land on the surface of the Moon.[22]

On 29 January, the lander resumed operations after being shut for a week. JAXA said it re-established contact with the lander and its solar cells were working again after a shift in lighting conditions allowed it to catch sunlight.[23] After that, SLIM was put in sleep mode for the impending harsh lunar night. SLIM was expected to operate only for one lunar daylight period, or 14 Earth days, and the on-board electronics were not designed to withstand the −120 °C (−184 °F) nighttime temperatures on the Moon. On 25 February 2024, JAXA sent wake-up calls and found SLIM had successfully survived the night on the lunar surface while maintaining communication capabilities. Since it was lunar midday on 25 February the temperature of the communications payload was extremely high, so communication was terminated after only a short period of time. JAXA prepared for resumed operations once the temperature fell sufficiently. This feat of surviving the lunar night without a radioisotope heater unit had previously been achieved only by some landers in the Surveyor Program.[24][25]

SLIM showed perseverance and survived another lunar night waking up on 28 March 2024.[26]

European Space Agency edit

The European Space Agency launched a small, low-cost lunar orbital probe called SMART 1 on September 27, 2003. SMART 1's primary goal was to take three-dimensional X-ray and infrared imagery of the lunar surface. SMART 1 entered lunar orbit on November 15, 2004, and continued to make observations until September 3, 2006, when it was intentionally crashed into the lunar surface in order to study the impact plume.[27]

China edit

China has begun the Chinese Lunar Exploration Program for exploring the Moon and is investigating the prospect of lunar mining, specifically looking for the isotope helium-3 for use as an energy source on Earth.[28] China launched the Chang'e 1 robotic lunar orbiter on October 24, 2007. Originally planned for a one-year mission, the Chang'e 1 mission was very successful and ended up being extended for another four months. On March 1, 2009, Chang'e 1 was intentionally impacted on the lunar surface completing the 16-month mission. On October 1, 2010, China launched the Chang'e 2 lunar orbiter. China landed the rover Yutu and the Chang'e 3 lander on the Moon on December 14, 2013, became the third country to have done so.[29] Chang'e 3 is the first spacecraft to soft-land on lunar surface since Luna 24 in 1976. Since the Chang'e 3 mission was a success, the backup lander Chang'e 4 was re-purposed for the new mission goals. China launched on 7 December 2018 the Chang'e 4 mission to the lunar farside.[30] On January 3, 2019, Chang'e 4 landed on the far side of the Moon.[31] Chang'e 4 deployed the Yutu-2 Moon rover, which subsequently became the current record distance-holder for lunar surface travel.[32] Among other discoveries, Yutu-2 found that the dust at some locations of the far side of the Moon is up to 12 meters deep.[33]

China planned to conduct a sample return mission with its Chang'e 5 spacecraft in 2017, but that mission was postponed[34] due to the failure of the Long March 5 launch vehicle.[35] However, after a successful return of flight by the Long March 5 rocket in late December 2019, China targeted its Chang'e 5 sample return mission for late 2020.[36] China completed this mission on December 16, 2020, with the return of approximately 2 kilograms of lunar sample.[37]

China plans to send Chang'e 6 on 3 May, which will conduct the first lunar sample return from the south polar and far side of the Moon.[38] This will be China's second lunar sample return mission, the first was achieved by Chang'e 5 from the lunar near side 4 years ago. Pakistan will send a lunar orbiter called ICECUBE-Q along with Chang'e 6.[39]

India edit

 
These images show a very young lunar crater on the side of the Moon that faces away from Earth, as viewed by Chandrayaan-1's Moon Mineralogy Mapper equipment

India's national space agency, the Indian Space Research Organisation, launched Chandrayaan-1, an uncrewed lunar orbiter, on October 22, 2008.[40] The lunar probe was originally intended to orbit the Moon for two years, with scientific objectives to prepare a three-dimensional atlas of the near and far side of the Moon and to conduct a chemical and mineralogical mapping of the lunar surface.[41] The orbiter released the Moon Impact Probe which impacted the Moon at 15:04 GMT on November 14, 2008,[42] making India the fourth country to reach the lunar surface. Among Chandrayaan's many achievements was the discovery of the widespread presence of water molecules in the lunar soil.[43] This mission was followed up by Chandrayaan-2, which launched on July 22, 2019, and entered lunar orbit on August 20, 2019. Chandrayaan-2 also carried India's first lander and rover, but due to a last minute technical glitch in the landing system, these crash landed.[44]

Chandrayaan-2 was followed by Chandrayaan-3 the third lunar exploration mission by the Indian Space Research Organisation. It also carried the lander named Vikram and the rover named Pragyan, and completed the first soft landing on the south polar region of the moon.[45][46][47]

United States edit

The Ballistic Missile Defense Organization and NASA launched the Clementine mission in 1994, and Lunar Prospector in 1998.

 
Animation of Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter's trajectory from June 23, 2009, to June 30, 2009
   Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter ·   Moon

NASA launched the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter, on June 18, 2009, which has collected imagery of the Moon's surface. It also carried the Lunar Crater Observation and Sensing Satellite (LCROSS), which investigated the possible existence of water in Cabeus crater. GRAIL is another mission, launched in 2011.

Russia edit

On 10 August 2023, Russia launched the Luna 25 mission, its first mission to the Moon since 1976.[48] On August 20 it crashed into the Moon after a guidance error that resulted in an anomalous orbit lowering maneuver.[49]

South Korea edit

South Korea launched the lunar orbiter Danuri on 4 August, 2022, and it arrived at the Moon on 16 December 2022. This is the first phase of South Korea's lunar exploration program, with plans to launch another lunar lander and probe.[50]

Commercial missions edit

In 2007, the X Prize Foundation together with Google launched the Google Lunar X Prize to encourage commercial endeavors to the Moon. A prize of $20 million was to be awarded to the first private venture to get to the Moon with a robotic lander by the end of March 2018, with additional prizes worth $10 million for further milestones.[51][52] As of August 2016, 16 teams were reportedly participating in the competition.[53] In January 2018 the foundation announced that the prize would go unclaimed as none of the finalist teams would be able to make a launch attempt by the deadline.[54]

In August 2016, the US government granted permission to US-based start-up Moon Express to land on the Moon.[55] This marked the first time that a private enterprise was given the right to do so. The decision is regarded as a precedent helping to define regulatory standards for deep-space commercial activity in the future. Previously, private companies were restricted to operating on or around Earth.[55]

On 29 November 2018, NASA announced that nine commercial companies would compete to win a contract to send small payloads to the Moon in what is known as Commercial Lunar Payload Services. According to NASA administrator Jim Bridenstine, "We are building a domestic American capability to get back and forth to the surface of the moon.".[56]

The first commercial mission to the Moon was accomplished by the Manfred Memorial Moon Mission (4M), led by LuxSpace, an affiliate of German OHB AG. The mission was launched on 23 October 2014 with the Chinese Chang'e 5-T1 test spacecraft, attached to the upper stage of a Long March 3C/G2 rocket.[57][58] The 4M spacecraft made a Moon flyby on a night of October 28, 2014, after which it entered elliptical Earth orbit, exceeding its designed lifetime by four times.[59][60]

The Beresheet lander operated by Israel Aerospace Industries and SpaceIL impacted the Moon on April 11, 2019, after a failed landing attempt.[61]

Plans edit

Following the abandoned US Constellation program, plans for crewed flights followed by moonbases were declared by Russia, ESA, China, Japan, India, South Korea. All of them intend to continue the exploration of Moon with more uncrewed spacecraft.

India is planning and it is studying a potential collaboration with Japan to launch the Lunar Polar Exploration Mission in 2026–28.

Russia also announced plans to resume its previously frozen project Luna-Glob, an uncrewed lander and orbiter, which was slated to launch in 2021 but did not manifest.[62] In 2015, Roscosmos stated that Russia plans to place an astronaut on the Moon by 2030, leaving Mars to NASA. The purpose is to work jointly with NASA and avoid a space race.[63] A Russian Lunar Orbital Station has been proposed to orbit around the Moon after 2030.

In 2018, NASA released plans to return to the Moon with commercial and international partners as part of an overall agency Exploration Campaign in support of Space Policy Directive 1, giving rise to the Artemis program and the Commercial Lunar Payload Services (CLPS). NASA plans to start with robotic missions on the lunar surface, as well as the crewed Lunar Gateway. As of 2019, NASA is issuing contracts to develop new small lunar payload delivery services, develop lunar landers, and conduct more research on the Moon's surface ahead of a human return.[64] Artemis program involves several flights of the Orion spacecraft and lunar landings from 2022 to 2028.[65][66]

On November 3, 2021, NASA announced it had picked a landing site in the lunar south polar region near the crater Shackleton for an uncrewed spacecraft that included NASA's Polar Resources Ice-Mining Experiment-1. The precise location was termed the Shackleton Connecting Ridge, which features the advantage of near-continuous solar exposure and line-of-sight with Earth for communication.[67]

ESA's Moonlight Initiative aims to create a small network of communication and navigation satellites orbiting the Moon to support the Artemis landings.[68] These would enable communication with Earth even when out of direct line-of-sight. They would also provide navigation signals similar to the Global Positioning System on Earth, requiring precision timekeeping. Moonlight planners have proposed creating a new time zone for the Moon for this purpose, culminating in the introduction of the Coordinated Lunar Time standard in 2024.[69] Due to the lower gravity and relative motion, time passes more quickly on the Moon, making every 24-hour period elapse 56 microseconds early when measured from Earth.[70]

See also edit

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  67. ^ "NASA picks landing site at the moon's south pole for ice-drilling robot". Space.com. November 5, 2021.
  68. ^ What is ESA’s Moonlight initiative?
  69. ^ Ramirez-Simon, Diana (April 3, 2024). "Moon Standard Time? Nasa to create lunar-centric time reference system". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved April 4, 2024.
  70. ^ If daylight saving time seems tricky, try figuring out the time on the moon

External links edit

  • An interactive web documentary about the Moon – ESA
  • Lunar mission timeline – NASA

exploration, moon, physical, exploration, moon, began, when, luna, space, probe, launched, soviet, union, made, deliberate, impact, surface, moon, september, 1959, prior, that, only, available, means, exploration, been, observation, from, earth, invention, opt. The physical exploration of the Moon began when Luna 2 a space probe launched by the Soviet Union made a deliberate impact on the surface of the Moon on September 14 1959 Prior to that the only available means of exploration had been observation from Earth The invention of the optical telescope brought about the first leap in the quality of lunar observations Galileo Galilei is generally credited as the first person to use a telescope for astronomical purposes having made his own telescope in 1609 the mountains and craters on the lunar surface were among his first observations using it Apollo 12 Lunar Module Intrepid prepares to descend towards the surface of the Moon 1969 NASA photo by Richard F Gordon Jr NASA s Apollo program was the only program to successfully land humans on the Moon which it did six times The first landing took place in 1969 when Apollo 11 astronauts Buzz Aldrin and Neil Armstrong left scientific instruments and returned lunar samples to Earth Starting in 2025 NASA s Artemis program plans to conduct further crewed lunar exploration missions The first soft landing on the far side of the Moon was made by the Chinese robotic spacecraft Chang e 4 in early 2019 which successfully deployed the Yutu 2 robotic lunar rover The first soft landing on the South Pole of the Moon was made by the Indian lander Vikram of Chandrayaan 3 in 2023 which successfully deployed the Pragyan rover 1 2 Contents 1 Before spaceflight 2 Space Race 3 After 1990 3 1 Japan 3 2 European Space Agency 3 3 China 3 4 India 3 5 United States 3 6 Russia 3 7 South Korea 3 8 Commercial missions 4 Plans 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksBefore spaceflight editSee also Selenography and Lunar theory The ancient Greek philosopher Anaxagoras whose non religious view of the heavens was one cause for his imprisonment and eventual exile 3 reasoned that the Sun and Moon were both giant spherical rocks and that the latter reflected the light of the former Plutarch in his book On the Face in the Moon s Orb suggested that the Moon had deep recesses in which the light of the Sun did not reach and that the spots are nothing but the shadows of rivers or deep chasms He also entertained the possibility that the Moon was inhabited Aristarchus attempted to compute the Moon s size and distance from Earth although his estimated distance of 20 times Earth s radius which had been accurately determined by his contemporary Eratosthenes proved to be about a third the actual average distance Chinese philosophers of the Han Dynasty believed the Moon to be energy equated to qi but recognized that the light of the Moon was a reflection of the Sun 4 Mathematician and astrologer Jing Fang noted the sphericity of the Moon 4 Shen Kuo of the Song Dynasty created an allegory equating the waxing and waning of the Moon to a round ball of reflective silver that when doused with white powder and viewed from the side would appear to be a crescent 4 Indian astronomer Aryabhata stated in his fifth century text Aryabhatiya that reflected sunlight is what causes the Moon to shine 5 Persian astronomer Habash al Hasib al Marwazi conducted various observations at the Al Shammisiyyah observatory in Baghdad between 825 and 835 6 Using these observations he estimated the Moon s diameter as 3 037 km equivalent to 1 519 km radius and its distance from the Earth as 346 345 km 215 209 mi 6 In the 11th century the Islamic physicist Alhazen investigated moonlight through a number of experiments and observations concluding it was a combination of the Moon s own light and the Moon s ability to absorb and emit sunlight 7 8 By the Middle Ages before the invention of the telescope an increasing number of people began to recognise the Moon as a sphere though many believed that it was perfectly smooth 9 In 1609 Galileo Galilei drew one of the first telescopic drawings of the Moon in his book Sidereus Nuncius and noted that it was not smooth but had mountains and craters Later in the 17th century Giovanni Battista Riccioli and Francesco Maria Grimaldi drew a map of the Moon and gave many craters the names they still have today On maps the dark parts of the Moon s surface were called maria singular mare or seas and the light parts were called terrae or continents nbsp Galileo s sketches of the Moon from the groundbreaking Sidereus Nuncius Thomas Harriot as well as Galilei drew the first telescopic representation of the Moon and observed it for several years His drawings however remained unpublished 10 The first map of the Moon was made by the Belgian cosmographer and astronomer Michael van Langren in 1645 10 Two years later a much more influential effort was published by Johannes Hevelius In 1647 Hevelius published Selenographia the first treatise entirely devoted to the Moon Hevelius s nomenclature although used in Protestant countries until the eighteenth century was replaced by the system published in 1651 by the Jesuit astronomer Giovanni Battista Riccioli who gave the large naked eye spots the names of seas and the telescopic spots now called craters the name of philosophers and astronomers 10 nbsp A study of the Moon from Robert Hooke s Micrographia 1665 In 1753 the Croatian Jesuit and astronomer Roger Joseph Boscovich discovered the absence of atmosphere on the Moon In 1824 Franz von Paula Gruithuisen explained the formation of craters as a result of meteorite strikes 11 The possibility that the Moon contains vegetation and is inhabited by selenites was seriously considered by major astronomers even into the first decades of the 19th century In 1834 1836 Wilhelm Beer and Johann Heinrich Madler published their four volume Mappa Selenographica and the book Der Mond in 1837 which firmly established the conclusion that the Moon has no bodies of water nor any appreciable atmosphere 12 nbsp The earliest surviving daguerrotype of the Moon by John W Draper 1840 nbsp Photo of the Moon made by Lewis Rutherfurd in 1865Space Race editMain articles Space Race and Moon landing See also Apollo program and Soviet crewed lunar programs The Cold War inspired space race and Moon race between the Soviet Union and the United States of America accelerated with a focus on the Moon This included many scientifically important firsts such as the first photographs of the then unseen far side of the Moon in 1959 by the Soviet Union and culminated with the landing of the first humans on the Moon in 1969 widely seen around the world as one of the pivotal events of the 20th century and of human history in general nbsp The first picture of another world from space and of the Moon s far side photographed by Luna 3 in 1959 nbsp Museum replica of Luna 1 and Luna 2 nbsp Scale model of Luna 3 nbsp First image of the Moon taken by a U S spacecraft 13 Ranger 7 in July 1964 nbsp Block III Ranger probe nbsp First photo ever taken from the surface of the Moon by Luna 9 in February 1966 nbsp Luna 9 was the first spacecraft to achieve a landing on the Moon in February 1966 nbsp Earthrise taken by William Anders of Apollo 8 in December 1968 nbsp 1966 stamp with a drawing of the first soft landed probe Luna 9 next to the first view of the lunar surface photographed by the probe nbsp Apollo 17 astronaut Harrison Schmitt standing next to a boulder at Taurus Littrow during the third EVA extravehicular activity nbsp Luna 16 first lunar sample return for the USSR in September 1970 The first artificial object to fly by the Moon was uncrewed Soviet probe Luna 1 on January 4 1959 and went on to be the first probe to reach a heliocentric orbit around the Sun 14 Few knew that Luna 1 was designed to impact the surface of the Moon The first probe to impact the surface of the Moon was the Soviet probe Luna 2 which made a hard landing on September 14 1959 at 21 02 24 UTC The far side of the Moon was first photographed on October 7 1959 by the Soviet probe Luna 3 Though vague by today s standards the photos showed that the far side of the Moon almost completely lacked maria The first American probe to fly by the Moon was Pioneer 4 on March 4 1959 which occurred shortly after Luna 1 It was the only success of eight American probes that first attempted to launch for the Moon 15 In an effort to compete with these Soviet successes U S President John F Kennedy proposed the Moon landing in a Special Message to the Congress on Urgent National Needs Now it is time to take longer strides time for a great new American enterprise time for this nation to take a clearly leading role in space achievement which in many ways may hold the key to our future on Earth For while we cannot guarantee that we shall one day be first we can guarantee that any failure to make this effort will make us last I believe that this nation should commit itself to achieving the goal before this decade is out of landing a man on the Moon and returning him safely to the Earth No single space project in this period will be more impressive to mankind or more important in the long range exploration of space and none will be so difficult or expensive to accomplish let it be clear that I am asking the Congress and the country to accept a firm commitment to a new course of action a course which will last for many years and carry very heavy costs 16 Full text nbsp Ranger 1 launched in August 1961 just three months after President Kennedy s speech It would be three more years and six failed Ranger missions until Ranger 7 returned close up photos of the Lunar surface before impacting it in July 1964 A number of problems with launch vehicles ground equipment and spacecraft electronics plagued the Ranger program and early probe missions in general These lessons helped in Mariner 2 the only successful U S space probe after Kennedy s famous speech to congress and before his death in November 1963 17 U S success rates improved greatly from Ranger 7 onward In 1966 the USSR accomplished the first soft landings and took the first pictures from the lunar surface during the Luna 9 and Luna 13 missions The U S followed Ranger with the Surveyor program 18 sending seven robotic spacecraft to the surface of the Moon Five of the seven spacecraft successfully soft landed investigating if the regolith dust was shallow enough for astronauts to stand on the Moon In September 1968 the Soviet Union s Zond 5 sent tortoises on a circumlunar mission followed by turtles aboard Zond 6 in November On December 24 1968 the crew of Apollo 8 Frank Borman James Lovell and William Anders became the first human beings to enter lunar orbit and see the far side of the Moon in person Humans first landed on the Moon on July 20 1969 The first humans to walk on the lunar surface were Neil Armstrong commander of the U S mission Apollo 11 and his fellow astronaut Buzz Aldrin The first robot lunar rover to land on the Moon was the Soviet vessel Lunokhod 1 on November 17 1970 as part of the Lunokhod programme To date the last human to stand on the Moon was Eugene Cernan who as part of the Apollo 17 mission walked on the Moon in December 1972 Moon rock samples were brought back to Earth by three Luna missions Luna 16 20 and 24 and the Apollo missions 11 through 17 except Apollo 13 which aborted its planned lunar landing Luna 24 in 1976 was the last Lunar mission by either the Soviet Union or the U S until Clementine in 1994 Focus shifted to probes to other planets space stations and the Shuttle program Before the Moon race the U S had pre projects for scientific and military moonbases the Lunex Project and Project Horizon Besides crewed landings the abandoned Soviet crewed lunar programs included the building of a multipurpose moonbase Zvezda the first detailed project complete with developed mockups of expedition vehicles 19 and surface modules 20 After 1990 edit nbsp Cassini Huygens took this image during its lunar flyby before it traveled to Saturn Japan edit Main article Japanese Lunar Exploration Program In 1990 Japan visited the Moon with the Hiten spacecraft becoming the third country to place an object in orbit around the Moon The spacecraft released the Hagoromo probe into lunar orbit but the transmitter failed thereby preventing further scientific use of the spacecraft In September 2007 Japan launched the SELENE spacecraft with the objectives to obtain scientific data of the lunar origin and evolution and to develop the technology for the future lunar exploration according to the JAXA official website 21 In 2023 Smart Lander for Investigating Moon SLIM is a lunar lander mission of the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency JAXA By 2017 the lander was planned to be launched in 2021 but this was delayed until 2023 due to delays in SLIM s ride share mission X Ray Imaging and Spectroscopy Mission XRISM It was successfully launched on 6 September 2023 at 23 42 UTC 7 September 08 42 Japan Standard Time On 1 October 2023 the lander executed its trans lunar injection burn It entered orbit around the Moon on 25 December 2023 and landed on 19 January 2024 at 15 20 UTC As a result Japan became the fifth country to soft land on the surface of the Moon 22 On 29 January the lander resumed operations after being shut for a week JAXA said it re established contact with the lander and its solar cells were working again after a shift in lighting conditions allowed it to catch sunlight 23 After that SLIM was put in sleep mode for the impending harsh lunar night SLIM was expected to operate only for one lunar daylight period or 14 Earth days and the on board electronics were not designed to withstand the 120 C 184 F nighttime temperatures on the Moon On 25 February 2024 JAXA sent wake up calls and found SLIM had successfully survived the night on the lunar surface while maintaining communication capabilities Since it was lunar midday on 25 February the temperature of the communications payload was extremely high so communication was terminated after only a short period of time JAXA prepared for resumed operations once the temperature fell sufficiently This feat of surviving the lunar night without a radioisotope heater unit had previously been achieved only by some landers in the Surveyor Program 24 25 SLIM showed perseverance and survived another lunar night waking up on 28 March 2024 26 European Space Agency edit The European Space Agency launched a small low cost lunar orbital probe called SMART 1 on September 27 2003 SMART 1 s primary goal was to take three dimensional X ray and infrared imagery of the lunar surface SMART 1 entered lunar orbit on November 15 2004 and continued to make observations until September 3 2006 when it was intentionally crashed into the lunar surface in order to study the impact plume 27 China edit Main article Chinese Lunar Exploration Program China has begun the Chinese Lunar Exploration Program for exploring the Moon and is investigating the prospect of lunar mining specifically looking for the isotope helium 3 for use as an energy source on Earth 28 China launched the Chang e 1 robotic lunar orbiter on October 24 2007 Originally planned for a one year mission the Chang e 1 mission was very successful and ended up being extended for another four months On March 1 2009 Chang e 1 was intentionally impacted on the lunar surface completing the 16 month mission On October 1 2010 China launched the Chang e 2 lunar orbiter China landed the rover Yutu and the Chang e 3 lander on the Moon on December 14 2013 became the third country to have done so 29 Chang e 3 is the first spacecraft to soft land on lunar surface since Luna 24 in 1976 Since the Chang e 3 mission was a success the backup lander Chang e 4 was re purposed for the new mission goals China launched on 7 December 2018 the Chang e 4 mission to the lunar farside 30 On January 3 2019 Chang e 4 landed on the far side of the Moon 31 Chang e 4 deployed the Yutu 2 Moon rover which subsequently became the current record distance holder for lunar surface travel 32 Among other discoveries Yutu 2 found that the dust at some locations of the far side of the Moon is up to 12 meters deep 33 China planned to conduct a sample return mission with its Chang e 5 spacecraft in 2017 but that mission was postponed 34 due to the failure of the Long March 5 launch vehicle 35 However after a successful return of flight by the Long March 5 rocket in late December 2019 China targeted its Chang e 5 sample return mission for late 2020 36 China completed this mission on December 16 2020 with the return of approximately 2 kilograms of lunar sample 37 China plans to send Chang e 6 on 3 May which will conduct the first lunar sample return from the south polar and far side of the Moon 38 This will be China s second lunar sample return mission the first was achieved by Chang e 5 from the lunar near side 4 years ago Pakistan will send a lunar orbiter called ICECUBE Q along with Chang e 6 39 India edit Main article Chandrayaan Programme nbsp These images show a very young lunar crater on the side of the Moon that faces away from Earth as viewed by Chandrayaan 1 s Moon Mineralogy Mapper equipment India s national space agency the Indian Space Research Organisation launched Chandrayaan 1 an uncrewed lunar orbiter on October 22 2008 40 The lunar probe was originally intended to orbit the Moon for two years with scientific objectives to prepare a three dimensional atlas of the near and far side of the Moon and to conduct a chemical and mineralogical mapping of the lunar surface 41 The orbiter released the Moon Impact Probe which impacted the Moon at 15 04 GMT on November 14 2008 42 making India the fourth country to reach the lunar surface Among Chandrayaan s many achievements was the discovery of the widespread presence of water molecules in the lunar soil 43 This mission was followed up by Chandrayaan 2 which launched on July 22 2019 and entered lunar orbit on August 20 2019 Chandrayaan 2 also carried India s first lander and rover but due to a last minute technical glitch in the landing system these crash landed 44 Chandrayaan 2 was followed by Chandrayaan 3 the third lunar exploration mission by the Indian Space Research Organisation It also carried the lander named Vikram and the rover named Pragyan and completed the first soft landing on the south polar region of the moon 45 46 47 United States edit The Ballistic Missile Defense Organization and NASA launched the Clementine mission in 1994 and Lunar Prospector in 1998 nbsp Animation of Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter s trajectory from June 23 2009 to June 30 2009 Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter Moon NASA launched the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter on June 18 2009 which has collected imagery of the Moon s surface It also carried the Lunar Crater Observation and Sensing Satellite LCROSS which investigated the possible existence of water in Cabeus crater GRAIL is another mission launched in 2011 Russia edit On 10 August 2023 Russia launched the Luna 25 mission its first mission to the Moon since 1976 48 On August 20 it crashed into the Moon after a guidance error that resulted in an anomalous orbit lowering maneuver 49 South Korea edit South Korea launched the lunar orbiter Danuri on 4 August 2022 and it arrived at the Moon on 16 December 2022 This is the first phase of South Korea s lunar exploration program with plans to launch another lunar lander and probe 50 Commercial missions edit In 2007 the X Prize Foundation together with Google launched the Google Lunar X Prize to encourage commercial endeavors to the Moon A prize of 20 million was to be awarded to the first private venture to get to the Moon with a robotic lander by the end of March 2018 with additional prizes worth 10 million for further milestones 51 52 As of August 2016 16 teams were reportedly participating in the competition 53 In January 2018 the foundation announced that the prize would go unclaimed as none of the finalist teams would be able to make a launch attempt by the deadline 54 In August 2016 the US government granted permission to US based start up Moon Express to land on the Moon 55 This marked the first time that a private enterprise was given the right to do so The decision is regarded as a precedent helping to define regulatory standards for deep space commercial activity in the future Previously private companies were restricted to operating on or around Earth 55 On 29 November 2018 NASA announced that nine commercial companies would compete to win a contract to send small payloads to the Moon in what is known as Commercial Lunar Payload Services According to NASA administrator Jim Bridenstine We are building a domestic American capability to get back and forth to the surface of the moon 56 The first commercial mission to the Moon was accomplished by the Manfred Memorial Moon Mission 4M led by LuxSpace an affiliate of German OHB AG The mission was launched on 23 October 2014 with the Chinese Chang e 5 T1 test spacecraft attached to the upper stage of a Long March 3C G2 rocket 57 58 The 4M spacecraft made a Moon flyby on a night of October 28 2014 after which it entered elliptical Earth orbit exceeding its designed lifetime by four times 59 60 The Beresheet lander operated by Israel Aerospace Industries and SpaceIL impacted the Moon on April 11 2019 after a failed landing attempt 61 Plans editSee also List of missions to the Moon Following the abandoned US Constellation program plans for crewed flights followed by moonbases were declared by Russia ESA China Japan India South Korea All of them intend to continue the exploration of Moon with more uncrewed spacecraft India is planning and it is studying a potential collaboration with Japan to launch the Lunar Polar Exploration Mission in 2026 28 Russia also announced plans to resume its previously frozen project Luna Glob an uncrewed lander and orbiter which was slated to launch in 2021 but did not manifest 62 In 2015 Roscosmos stated that Russia plans to place an astronaut on the Moon by 2030 leaving Mars to NASA The purpose is to work jointly with NASA and avoid a space race 63 A Russian Lunar Orbital Station has been proposed to orbit around the Moon after 2030 In 2018 NASA released plans to return to the Moon with commercial and international partners as part of an overall agency Exploration Campaign in support of Space Policy Directive 1 giving rise to the Artemis program and the Commercial Lunar Payload Services CLPS NASA plans to start with robotic missions on the lunar surface as well as the crewed Lunar Gateway As of 2019 NASA is issuing contracts to develop new small lunar payload delivery services develop lunar landers and conduct more research on the Moon s surface ahead of a human return 64 Artemis program involves several flights of the Orion spacecraft and lunar landings from 2022 to 2028 65 66 On November 3 2021 NASA announced it had picked a landing site in the lunar south polar region near the crater Shackleton for an uncrewed spacecraft that included NASA s Polar Resources Ice Mining Experiment 1 The precise location was termed the Shackleton Connecting Ridge which features the advantage of near continuous solar exposure and line of sight with Earth for communication 67 ESA s Moonlight Initiative aims to create a small network of communication and navigation satellites orbiting the Moon to support the Artemis landings 68 These would enable communication with Earth even when out of direct line of sight They would also provide navigation signals similar to the Global Positioning System on Earth requiring precision timekeeping Moonlight planners have proposed creating a new time zone for the Moon for this purpose culminating in the introduction of the Coordinated Lunar Time standard in 2024 69 Due to the lower gravity and relative motion time passes more quickly on the Moon making every 24 hour period elapse 56 microseconds early when measured from Earth 70 See also edit nbsp Spaceflight portal nbsp Solar System portal Artemis program Colonization of the Moon Tourism on the Moon Lunar outpost NASA International Lunar Exploration Working Group List of artificial objects on the Moon List of Apollo astronauts List of lunar probes Lunar resources Moon landing Timeline of Solar System exploration Starship HLSReferences edit India s Chandrayaan 3 successfully lands on the Moon The European Space Agency Retrieved August 23 2023 Jeffrey Kluger How India Became the First Country to Reach the Moon s South Pole Time Retrieved August 23 2023 O Connor J J Robertson E F February 1999 Anaxagoras of Clazomenae University of St Andrews Retrieved April 12 2007 a b c Needham Joseph 1986 Mathematics and the Sciences of the Heavens and Earth Science and Civilization in China Vol 3 Taipei Caves Books p 227 411 416 ISBN 978 0 521 05801 8 Hayashi 2008 Aryabhata I a b Langermann Y Tzvi 1985 The Book of Bodies and Distances of Habash al Hasib Centaurus 28 2 111 112 Bibcode 1985Cent 28 108T doi 10 1111 j 1600 0498 1985 tb00831 x Toomer G J December 1964 Review Ibn al Haythams Weg zur 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Private Companies Spacecraft The New York Times Archived from the original on December 1 2018 Retrieved November 29 2018 First commercial mission to the Moon launched from China Spaceflight Now October 25 2014 Retrieved July 24 2015 China Readies Moon Mission for Launch Next Week Space com October 14 2014 Retrieved July 24 2015 Saft lithium batteries powered the 4M mini probe to success on the world s first privately funded Moon mission Press release paris Saft January 21 2015 Archived from the original on July 24 2015 Retrieved July 24 2015 Moser H A Ruy G Schwarzenbarth K Frappe J B Basesler K Van Shie B August 2015 Manfred Memorial Moon Mission 4M development operations and results of a privately funded low cost lunar flyby 29th Annual AIAA USU Conference on Small Satellites Retrieved April 9 2023 Lidman Melanie Israel s Beresheet spacecraft crashes into the moon during landing attempt www timesofisrael com Retrieved October 7 2019 Covault Craig June 4 2006 Russia Plans Ambitious Robotic Lunar Mission Russia to place man on Moon by 2030 leaving Mars to NASA June 27 2015 Warner Cheryl April 30 2018 NASA Expands Plans for Moon Exploration NASA Retrieved April 1 2019 National Space Exploration Campaign Report PDF NASA September 2018 Moon to Mars NASA June 25 2018 Retrieved June 10 2019 NASA picks landing site at the moon s south pole for ice drilling robot Space com November 5 2021 What is ESA s Moonlight initiative Ramirez Simon Diana April 3 2024 Moon Standard Time Nasa to create lunar centric time reference system The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved April 4 2024 If daylight saving time seems tricky try figuring out the time on the moonExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Moon exploration An interactive web documentary about the Moon ESA Lunar mission timeline NASA Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Exploration of the Moon amp oldid 1221050663, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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