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The Planetary Society Blog

By Emily Lakdawalla




Another lunar lander photographed: Surveyor 1!

Sep. 30, 2009 | 14:40 PDT | 21:40 UTC
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The Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter camera team has managed to capture a view of Surveyor 1, the first American spacecraft to soft-land on another world. Cool!

Surveyor 1 found!
Surveyor 1 found!
Surveyor 1 was the first US spacecraft to land on another planet, on June 2, 1966. This photo was taken under afternoon lighting conditions, with the Sun coming from the west (left), making the 3.3-meter-tall spacecraft cast a 15-meter-long shadow to the east. Credit: NASA / GSFC / ASU
Surveyor 1 was a good-sized spacecraft, 3.3 meters (about 11 feet) tall:
Surveyor
Surveyor
The Surveyor probes were the first U.S. spacecraft to land safely on the Moon. Five of the seven probes made it safely to the lunar surface.
Surveyor 1 carried only one instrument, a television camera, but the camera worked hard, returning more than 11,000 images to Earth. Phil Stooke has lovingly reassembled the Surveyor 1 mosaic of its landing site for your enjoyment:
Lunar Surveyor 1 Panorama: Flamsteed region in Oceanus Procellarum, June 1966
Lunar Surveyor 1 Panorama: Flamsteed region in Oceanus Procellarum, June 1966
Surveyor 1 was the first spacecraft from the United States to perform a controlled landing on the surface of the Moon, at 2.45 S, 316.79 E. Surveyor 1 took more than 11,100 images of the lunar landscape during its 6-week mission. This panorama was scanned from a photographic print of a hand-assembled mosaic, then digitally reconstructed and cleaned of visual defects by Philip Stooke. Credit: NASA / Philip Stooke, University of Western Ontario

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Comments

MOON
I WONDER HOW MUCH FUEL THEY USED
#1 - jerry - 02/27/2010 - 16:37
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