Ranger 9

past Mission

Type

Impact

Launch

March 21, 1965

Target

Earth's Moon

Objective

Photograph and then impact the Moon

NASA's Ranger 9 was the last in a series of spacecraft launched in the 1960s to explore the Moon. It was designed to take images as it descended to the lunar surface for impact. Unlike its predecessors, Ranger 9 pointed its cameras in the direction it was heading and captured stunning photographs of the Moon's surface.

NASA's Ranger spacecraft.
Credit: NASA

What was Ranger 9?

NASA's Ranger 9 was the last in a series of spacecraft launched in the 1960s to explore the Moon. It was designed to take images as it descended to the lunar surface for impact.

  • Unlike its predecessors, Ranger 9 pointed its cameras in the direction it was heading and captured stunning photographs of the Moon's surface.

Nation
United States of America (USA)
Objective(s)
Lunar Impact
Spacecraft
Ranger-D
Spacecraft Mass
809 pounds (366.87 kilograms)
Mission Design and Management
NASA / JPL
Launch Vehicle
Atlas Agena B (Atlas Agena B no. 14 / Atlas D no. 204 / Agena B no. 6007)
Launch Date and Time
March 21, 1965 / 21:37:02 UT
Launch Site
Cape Canaveral, Fla. / Launch Complex 12
Scientific Instruments
1. Imaging System (Six TV Cameras)

Key Dates

March 21, 1965: Launch

March 24, 1965: Spacecraft crashed on Moon

In Depth: Ranger 9

NASA's Ranger 9 was the final Ranger mission of the Block 3 series and closed out the program as a whole.

Since both Ranger 7 and Ranger 8 had provided sufficient photographs of the mare regions (potential landing sites for the early Apollo missions), Ranger 9 was targeted to the more geologically interesting Alphonsus crater in the lunar highlands, a possible site for recent volcanic activity.

Following a course correction on March 23, 1965, the spacecraft headed directly to its impact point. Only 20 minutes prior to impact, Ranger 9 began taking the first of 5,814 pictures from an altitude of 1,300 miles (2,100 kilometers).

Unlike its predecessors, the cameras this time were aimed in the direction of travel and provided some spectacular shots as the spacecraft approached the lunar surface. These pictures were converted for live viewing on commercial TV. The best resolution was about 10 to 12 inches (25 to 30 centimeters) just prior to impact.

The spacecraft crashed onto the Moon at 14:08:20 UT March 24, 1965, at 12.83 degrees south latitude and 357.63 degrees east longitude, about 4 miles (6.5 kilometers) from its scheduled target at a velocity of about 1.7 miles per second (2.67 kilometers per second).

Key Source

Siddiqi, Asif A. Beyond Earth: A Chronicle of Deep Space Exploration, 1958-2016. NASA History Program Office, 2018.

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