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DESTINATION MOON: A History of the
Lunar Orbiter Program
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- CHAPTER VII: BUILDING THE
SPACECRAFT: PROBLEMS AND RESOLUTIONS
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- Other Potential
Experiments
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- [145] Although the
Block I spacecraft carried only the four experiments described
above, the Lunar Orbiter Program Office was Planning a greater
number of more sophisticated scientific experiments for the Block
II Orbiter. They included: 1) a gamma ray experiment to determine
the presence and relative abundance of natural, long-lived
radioisotopes on the surface of the Moon; 2) an infrared
experiment for mapping the lateral variations in the Moon's
surface temperature; 3) a bi-static radar experiment for
determining the average radar cross-section, surface roughness
correlation functions, altitude measurements, reflectivity, and
the dielectric properties of the lunar surface; 4) a
photometry/colorimetry experiment to determine variations in the
photometric function and the color of lunar surface materials; 5)
a radiometer experiment for measurement and determination of lunar
surface thermal gradients; 6) an X-ray fluorescent experiment to
detect the relative abundance of iron and nickle on the Moon's
surface; 7) a solar plasma experiment to study the spatial and
temporal flux variation [146] and energy
distribution of low-energy protons and electrons of the plasma; 8)
an experiment to investigate the magnetic field In the vicinity of
the Moon; and, finally, 9) a lunar ionosphere experiment to
determine the presence of a low-density ionosphere in the
immediate vicinity of the Moon's surface.12
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- These experiments, spanning a wide range
of scientific fields of investigation, demonstrated that the Lunar
Orbiter Program envisioned in a second block of spacecraft a
series which would conduct primarily scientific investigations and
not necessarily more photography of the lunar surface. NASA had
already designated the Block I Orbiters for missions which would
gather photographic data of the lunar surface vital for miss ion
planning of the Apollo Program.
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- Moreover, the first Lunar Orbiters would
explore some aspects of the Moon's environment and complement the
work which the Surveyor spacecraft would carry out when they
landed on the Moon. The Orbiter concept, expanded in a second
series of spacecraft, could achieve major advances in knowledge
about Earth's natural satellite, a philosophy consistent with the
mainstream of thought in the Office of Space Science and
Applications. However, lack of funds eventually precluded the
Block II Orbiters and curtailed a [147] major U.S.
scientific thrust in exploring the Moon.
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