Lunar Orbiter 2
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Organization: | NASA |
Major Contractors: | Langley Research Center |
Mission Type: | Lunar Science |
Satellite of: | Moon |
Launch: | November 6, 1966 at 23:21:00 UTC |
Launch Vehicle: | Atlas-Agena D |
Decay: | Impacted lunar surface on October 11, 1967, at 3.0 degrees N, - 119.1 degrees E. |
Mission Duration: | 339 days |
Mass: | 385.6 kg |
NSSDC ID: | 1966-100A |
Webpage: | NASA NSSDC Master Catalog |
Orbital elements | |
---|---|
Semimajor Axis: | 2,694.0 km |
Eccentricity: | .35 |
Inclination: | 11.9° |
Orbital Period: | 208.07 minutes |
Aposelene: | 1,860 km |
Periselene: | 52 km |
Orbits: | 2,346 |
Instruments | |
Lunar Photographic Studies : | Evaluation of Apollo and Surveyor landing sites |
Meteoroid Detectors : |
Detection of micrometeoroids in the lunar environment |
Cesium Iodide Dosimeters : | Radiation environment enroute to and near the Moon |
Selenodesy : | Gravitational field and physical properties of the Moon |
The Lunar Orbiter 2 spacecraft was designed primarily to photograph smooth areas of the lunar surface for selection and verification of safe landing sites for the Surveyor and Apollo missions. It was also equipped to collect selenodetic, radiation intensity, and micrometeoroid impact data.
The spacecraft was placed in a cislunar trajectory and injected into an elliptical near-equatorial lunar orbit for data acquisition after 92.5 hours flight time. The initial orbit was 196 km x 1850 km at an inclination of 11.8 degrees. The perilune was lowered to 49.7 km five days later after 33 orbits. A failure of the amplifier on the final day of readout, 7 December, resulted in the loss of six photographs. On 8 December 1966 the inclination was altered to 17.5 degrees to provide new data on lunar gravity.
The spacecraft acquired photographic data from November 18 to 25, 1966, and readout occurred through December 7, 1966. A total of 609 high resolution and 208 medium resolution frames were returned, most of excellent quality with resolutions down to 1 meter. These included a spectacular oblique picture of Copernicus crater which was dubbed by the news media as one of the great pictures of the century. Accurate data were acquired from all other experiments throughout the mission. Three micrometeorite impacts were recorded. The spacecraft was used for tracking purposes until it impacted the lunar surface on command at 3.0 degrees N latitude, 119.1 degrees E longitude (selenographic coordinates) on October 11, 1967.
[edit] External links
Lunar Orbiter program | ||||
Previous mission: | Lunar Orbiter 1 | Next mission: | Lunar Orbiter 3 | |
Lunar Orbiter 1 | Lunar Orbiter 2 | Lunar Orbiter 3 | Lunar Orbiter 4 | Lunar Orbiter 5 |
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