Clementine Mission

February 18, 2022 1824 view(s) 2 min read
Clementine Mission

Clementine Mission header

Clementine Mission

Clementine launch

Clementine was a joint project between NASA and the Ballistic Missile Defense Organization. It was launched on January 25, 1994, with the objective of testing sensors and spacecraft components in long-term exposure to space and making scientific observations of the Moon and the near-Earth asteroid 1620 Geographos. However, a malfunction in the spacecraft prevented Clementine from reaching the asteroid.

 

Clementine was launched on January 25, 1994, using a Titan II launch vehicle from the Vandenberg Air Force Base, California. Clementine carried seven experiments onboard: a UV/Visible Camera, a Near Infrared Camera, a Long Wavelength Infrared Camera, a High-Resolution Camera, two Star Tracker Cameras, a Charged Particle Telescope, and a Laser Altimeter.

 

Clementine view of the Moon and VenusLunar insertion was achieved around one month after launch after two Earth flybys. The lunar mapping took place over two months in two parts: the first part was a five-hour elliptical polar orbit. Each orbit consisted of lunar mapping for 80 minutes and a 139-minute downlink.

 

The lunar observations included imaging at multiple wavelengths in visible, ultraviolet, and infrared laser ranging altimetry, gravimetry, and charged particle measurements. These observations were to obtain multi-spectral imaging of the entire lunar surface, assess the surface mineralogy of the Moon, and obtain gravity data. There were also plans for when Clementine reached Geographos to image and determine the shape, size, surface properties, rotational characteristics, and cratering statistics.

 

Clementine buildAfter two subsequent Earth flybys, Clementine was to head toward 1620 Geographos for a nearly 100 km approach. However, on May 7, 1994, after the first Earth transfer orbit, a malfunction caused one of the attitude control thrusters to fire and use its entire fuel supply, causing Clementine to spin. Under these conditions, the asteroid flyby could not yield any useful results, so the spacecraft was placed into a geocentric orbit and sent through the Van Allen radiation belts to test various components onboard the spacecraft.

 

The Clementine mission officially ended in June 1994 when the power level dropped to a level where the telemetry was no longer intelligible. However, ground controllers briefly regained contact between February and May 1995 before the mission was officially declared complete on May 10, 1995. On March 5, 1998, NASA announced that data obtained from the Clementine mission indicated that there is enough water in lunar polar craters to support a human colony.