National Aeronautics and Space Administration
Photo of the moon taken by Ranger IX
Television picture taken by Ranger IX prior to impact on March 24, 1965 at 06 08 20 PST. View with shadows to the left. North is at the top. Frame #35. Camera A. Time: 2 minutes 50 seconds before impact. Spacecraft altitude above Moon 258 miles. Dimensions 121 miles by 109 miles. Remarks: Alphonsus fills right half of picture, Alpetragius is near lower left with broad central mountain and Davy A is in the top left corner. The floor of Alphonsus shows intricate pattern of ridges and rilles. Eight craters with dark patches are seen near crater wall.
Photo of the moon taken by Ranger IX
Television picture taken by Ranger IX prior to impact on March 24, 1965 at 06 08 20 PST. View with shadows to the left. North is at the top. Frame #110 frames from the last. Camera B. Time 9 minutes 18 seconds before impact. Spacecraft altitude above Moon is 775 miles. Dimensions 147 miles by 123 miles. Remarks: Shows slightly more than half of the three major craters; Ptolemasus at the top with central peak, Aphonsus on the left with rile system and a central peak that rises 3,300 feet above floor and Albategnius with 4,500 feet central peak.
Ranger Moon photography satellites
Drawing of Ranger spacecraft
Photograph of the Earth
Moon surface photo taken with Lunar Orbiter V
This wide angle western looking oblique photograph was taken by Lunar Orbiter V on August 10, 1967, when it was 60 miles above the lunar surface. The elongated crater Messier is in the foreground. It is about 8 miles long, six miles wide, and about 4,000 feet deep. In back of it is the crater Messier A which is about 8 miles in diameter. These craters are located at 47 degrees East longitude and 2 degrees South latitude on the floor or Mare Fecunditatis. A doule ray extends west for about 100 miles from the pair of craters.
Moon surface photo taken with Lunar Orbiter V
Moon surface photo taken with Lunar Orbiter V
Moon surface photo taken with Lunar Orbiter IV
Hampton, Virginia -- The National Aeronautics and Space Administration's Lunar Orbiter IV spacecraft completed its photographic survey mission by returning telephoto pictures of 99 percent of the Moon's front face. The broad cross-hatched area on this chart indicates telephoto picture coverage from apolune photography. Arrows A and B at top show regions totaling one percent which were photographed in wide angle but not in telephoto pictures.