NASA's programme of unmanned Ranger probes intentionally crashed into the Moon and snapped photographs right up until impact. After a series of failures, the first Ranger probe to hit the Moon and send back photographs was Ranger 7 in 1964.
The programme was part of America's efforts to land astronauts on the Moon and helped Apollo mission controllers understand the lunar terrain and choose potential landing sites.
Photo: The Ranger spacecraft (NASA)
Dr William K Hartmann and Professor H Jay Melosh describe early 1960s, pre-Apollo 11 theories of the Moon's origins. The first fresh insights came from the Ranger missions, probes intentionally crashed into the Moon looking for Apollo landing sites.
There were competing theories about the origins of Moon craters before the Apollo landings. Some researchers thought that craters were volcanic in origin, something we now know is false. Others correctly theorised that Moon craters are created by impacts.
The Ranger program was a series of unmanned space missions by the United States in the 1960s whose objective was to obtain the first close-up images of the surface of the Moon. The Ranger spacecraft were designed to take images of the lunar surface, returning those images until they were destroyed upon impact. A series of mishaps, however, led to the failure of the first six flights. At one point, the program was called "shoot and hope". Congress launched an investigation into “problems of management” at NASA Headquarters and Jet Propulsion Laboratory. After reorganizing the organization twice, Ranger 7 successfully returned images in July 1964, followed by two more successful missions.
Ranger was originally designed, beginning in 1959, in three distinct phases, called "blocks". Each block had different mission objectives and progressively more advanced system design. The JPL mission designers planned multiple launches in each block, to maximize the engineering experience and scientific value of the mission and to assure at least one successful flight. Total research, development, launch, and support costs for the Ranger series of spacecraft (Rangers 1 through 9) was approximately $170 million.
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