CHAPTER 21CHAPTER 2CHAPTER 211 ||| THE MOON AND MERCURY: COMPARING AIRLESS WORLDSTHETHE MOON AND MERCURY: COMPARING AIRLESS WORLDS MOON AND MERCURY: COMPARING AIRLESS WORLDS 444499
■ Table 21-1 ❙ Apollo Lunar Landings
Apollo
Mission*
Astronauts:
Commander
LM Pilot
CM Pilot Date Mission Goals
Sample
Weight
(kg)
Typical
Samples
Ages
(10^9 y)
11 Armstrong
Aldrin
Collins
July
1969
First human landing;
Mare Tranquillitatis
21.7 Mare basalts 3.48–3.72
12 Conrad
Bean
Gordon
Nov.
1969
Visit Surveyor 3; sample
Oceanus Procellarum (mare)
34.4 Mare basalts 3.15–3.37
14 Shepard
Mitchell
Roosa
Feb.
1971
Fra Mauro,
Imbrium ejecta sheet
42.9 Breccia 3.85–3.96
15 Scott
Irwin
Worden
July
1971
Edge of Mare Imbrium
and Apennine Mountains,
Hadley Rille
76.8 Mare basalts;
highland anorthosite
3.28–3.44
4.09
16 Young
Duke
Mattingly
April
1972
Sample highland crust;
Cayley formation (ejecta);
Descartes
94.7 Highland basalt;
breccia
3.84
3.92
17 Cernan
Schmitt
Evans
Dec,
1972
Sample highland crust;
dark halo craters;
Taurus–Littrow
110.5 Mare basalt;
highland breccia
fractured dunite
3.77
3.86
4.48
*The Apollo 13 mission suffered an explosion on the way to the moon and did not land.
was tacked to the front of the command module like a bicycle
strapped to the front of the family camper. It carried only enough
fuel and supplies for the short trip to the lunar surface, and it was
built to minimize weight and maximize maneuverability.
Th e weaker gravity of the moon made the design of the LM
simpler. Landing on Earth requires reclining couches for the astro-
nauts, but the trip to the lunar surface involved smaller accelerations.
In an early version of the LM, the astronauts sat on what looked like
bicycle seats, but these were later scrapped to save weight. Th e astro-
nauts had no seats at all in the LM, and once they began their
descent and acquired weight, they stood at the controls held by
straps, riding the LM like daredevils on a rocket surfboard.
When it lifted off from the lunar surface, the LM saved
weight by leaving the larger descent rocket and support stage
behind. Only the compartment containing the two astronauts,
their instruments, and their cargo of rocks returned to the com-
mand module orbiting above. Th e astronauts in the LM blasting
up from the lunar surface were again standing at the controls.
Th e rocket engine that lifted them back into orbit around the
moon was not much bigger than a dishwasher.
Th e most complicated part of the trip was the rendezvous
and docking between the tiny remains of the LM and the com-
mand module. Aided by radar systems and computers, the two
astronauts docked with the command module, transferred their
moon rocks, and jettisoned the remains of the LM. Only the
command module returned to Earth.
Th e fi rst human-piloted lunar landing was made on July 20,
- While Michael Collins waited in orbit around the moon,
Neil Armstrong and Edwin Aldrin Jr. took the LM down to the
surface. Although much of the descent was controlled by com-
puters, the astronauts had to override a number of computer
alarms and take control of the LM to avoid a boulder-strewn
crater bigger than a football fi eld.
Between July 1969 and December 1972, 12 people reached
the lunar surface and collected 380 kg (840 lb) of rocks and soil
(■ Table 21-1). Th e fl ights were carefully planned to visit diff er-
ent regions and develop a comprehensive understanding of the
lunar surface.
Th e fi rst fl ights went to relatively safe landing sites
(■ Figure 21-4)—Mare Tranquillitatis for Apollo 11 and Oceanus
Procellarum for Apollo 12. Apollo 13 was aimed at a more com-
plicated site, but an explosion in an oxygen tank on the way to
the moon ended all chances of a landing and nearly cost the
astronauts their lives. Th ey succeeded in using the life support
in the LM to survive the trip around the moon, and they even-
tually returned to Earth safely in the crippled command
module.
Th e last four Apollo missions, 14 through 17, sampled geo-
logically important places on the moon. Apollo 14 visited the Fra
Mauro region, which is covered by ejecta from the impact that
dug the multiringed basin now fi lled by Mare Imbrium. Apollo
15 visited the edge of Mare Imbrium at the foot of the Apennine