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Apollo 16 Subsatellite

Type

Orbiter

Launch

Apr. 24, 1972

Target

Earth's Moon

Objective

Study the Moon's environment
Apollo 16 Subsatellite
Launch DateApr. 24, 1972
Launch SiteCape Canaveral, Florida, USA | Launch Complex 39A
DestinationEarth’s Moon
TypeOrbiter
StatusSuccessful
NationUnited States
Alternate Names1972-031D, Apollo 16D, PFS-2, Particles and Fields Subsatellite, 06009

Goals

The main objectives of this small satellite were to study the plasma, particle, and magnetic-field environment of the Moon and map the lunar gravity field.

Accomplishments

The satellite orbited the Moon for 34 days, during which it provided data similar to that of the Apollo 15 subsatellite. Its short lifetime (instead of the planned one year) resulted from the low orbit into which the Apollo 16 astronauts were forced to place it because of problems with the main engine of their Command and Service Module.

In Depth

Nearly identical to its predecessor, the Apollo 16 Particle and Fields Subsatellite was ejected from the Apollo 16 Command and Service Module (CSM) about 4 hours prior to the crew’s trans-Earth injection burn, which sent them home from the Moon.

Because of problems with the Apollo CSM main engine, the crew was forced to release the subsatellite in a low lunar orbit of 100 x 100 kilometers at 10° inclination. The orbit was rapidly altered by gravitational perturbations, and the probe crashed onto the lunar surface after 34 days in orbit rather than the planned one year. Impact point was at 10.2 degrees north latitude and 112 degrees east longitude at 21:00 UT on May 29, 1972. However, because of its low orbit, the spacecraft did return some valuable low-altitude data.

Spacecraft

Launch Vehicle: Saturn V

Spacecraft Mass: 36.3 kilograms

Spacecraft Instruments:

  1. magnetometer
  2. S-band transponder
  3. charged-particle detectors

Additional Resources

National Space Science Data Center Master Catalog: Apollo 16 Subsatellite

Selected References

Siddiqi, Asif A. Deep Space Chronicle: A Chronology of Deep Space and Planetary Probes 1958-2000, NASA, 2002.