Episodes Tagged with "Lunar Orbiter 5"
Posted on January 14, 2016
A total of five Lunar Orbiter missions were launched by the US in 1966 through 1967. The purpose of the lunar orbiter series was to photograph the moon’s surface for selection and verification of safe landing sites for the Surveyor and Apollo missio...
8-wresat
7-Wresat
6-Wresat
5-Lunar Orbiter 5 photo of the entire Tycho impact crater in the southern highlands
4-LO 4 Davy crater chain chain stretches from Davy Y at left to the large bright Davy G diameter 15 km Note the even spacing of the craters
3Lunar Orbiter 3 Image 3121_M – Tsiolkovskiy Crater center
2-Lunar Orbiter 2 on November 20, 1966, 29 miles (47 km) above the lunar surface, over the Sea of Tranquility
1-Lunar Orbiter 3 spacecraft
Tagged:Agena D, Apollo, Astrogeology Research Program, Atlas, Australia, Canberra, Canopus, Cape Canaveral, Cislunar Trajectory, Copernicus Crater, European Lanucher Development Organization, History, Lc 13, London Trade Fair In 1968, Lunar Orbiter 1, Lunar Orbiter 2, Lunar Orbiter 3, Lunar Orbiter 4, Lunar Orbiter 5, Lunar Orbiter Image Recovery Project, Marius Hills, Marquardt, Nasa, Parliament House, Project Sparta, Redstone, Regional Planetary Information Facilities, Rocket, Simpson Desert, Space, Sulpicius Gallus Rille, Surveyor 1, Surveyor 2, Surveyor 3, University Of Adelaide, Weapons Research Establishment Satellite, Woomera, Woomera Heritage Centre, Wresat
Posted on August 14, 2014
In the 1960s, during the cold war, the US and Soviet Union turned their attention to the moon. The question was, who could place a man on the moon and return him safely to the earth first? Obtaining the necessary data on the moon to risk sending a pe...
First_View_of_Earth_from_Moon
lunar_orbiter1
Surveyor_1_shadow_lunarsurface
Surveyor_1_Foot_Pad on the moon
Surveyor_1_launch with Atlas Centar
surveyor 1 mockup_beach
luna10
