| Organization: | NASA |
| Major Contractors: | Hughes Aircraft |
| Mission Type: | Lunar Science |
| Satellite of: | Moon |
| Launch: | April 17, 1967 at 07:05:00 UTC |
| Launch Vehicle: | Atlas-Centaur |
| Decay: | Landed on moon April 20, 1967, 00:04:53 UT at 2.94 S, 336.66 E |
| Mission Duration: | 65 hours |
| Mass: | 302 kg after landing |
| NSSDC ID: | 1967-035A |
| Webpage: | NASA NSSDC Master Catalog |
| Orbital elements | |
|---|---|
| Semimajor Axis: | N/A |
| Eccentricity: | N/A |
| Inclination: | N/A |
| Orbital Period: | N/A |
| Apogee: | N/A |
| Perigee: | N/A |
| Orbits: | Lunar soft landing. |
| Instruments | |
| Television : | Transmit closeup pictures of the lunar surface |
Surveyor 3 was the third lander of the Surveyor program that explored the Moon. Launched on April 17, 1967, Surveyor 3 landed April 20, 1967 at the Mare Cognitium portion of the Oceanus Procellarum. A total of 6,315 images were transmitted to Earth.
As it was landing, highly reflective rocks confused Surveyor 3's descent radar. The engines failed to cut off at 14 ft (4.3 m) as per the planned flight profile. This spacecraft bounced twice. The first bounce reached an altitude of 35 ft (10 m). The second bounce reached 11 ft (3 m). On the third impact -- from an initial altitude of 11 feet (3 m) and velocity of zero which was under the original design target of 14 ft (4.3 m) slowly descending -- the spacecraft settled in a soft landing as per the design intentions.
This mission was the first carrying a surface soil sampling scoop. This was mounted on a motor driven arm and used to dig four trenches. The trenches were up to 7 in (180 mm) deep. Samples from the trenches were placed in front of the spacecraft's television cameras for image transmission back to Earth. When lunar nightfall came on May 3, 1967, the spacecraft was shut down to preserve battery power; upon the next lunar dawn (14 terrestrial days, or approximately 14 times 24 = 336 hours) the spacecraft could not be reactivated.
This site was subsequently selected for the Apollo 12 manned lunar mission. Several components of the Surveyor were collected and returned to Earth for study of the long term exposure effects of the harsh lunar environment on human artifacts.
Perhaps Surveyor 3's most remarkable finding, though, was a complete accident. A common bacteria, Streptococcus mitis, was unintentionally present inside the spacecraft's camera at launch. Around 50 to 100 of these bacteria survived dormant in this harsh environment for three years, to be detected when Apollo 12 brought the camera back to Earth. The discovery, while paid comparatively little attention at the time, gave some credence to the idea of interplanetary panspermia, but more importantly, led NASA to adopt strict abiotic procedures for space probes to prevent contamination of Mars and other bodies suspected of having conditions suitable for life; most dramatically the Galileo spacecraft was deorbited to avoid impacting Europa.
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Surveyor 3".
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