What Has Crashed Into the Moon?
63 Years of Moon Crashes
In 2019, India’s Vikram and Israel’s Beresheet landers both crashed into the moon during their landing attempts.
The two unplanned impacts were the latest in a series of crashes, belly flops and hard landings — some intentional, others unplanned — since a Soviet probe first hit the moon on Sept. 13, 1959.
Finding Vikram
India’s Chandrayaan-2 moon lander — known as Vikram — lost communications with Earth and crashed on Sept. 7, 2019, as it descended toward a planned landing site near the moon’s south pole.
Curtius
Manzinus
Moretus
Vikram
lander
Boguslawsky
South
Pole
Path of the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter on Sept. 17, 2019
Curtius
Manzinus
Moretus
Vikram
lander
Boguslawsky
South
Pole
Path of the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter on Sept. 17, 2019
Curtius
Manzinus
Moretus
Vikram
lander
Boguslawsky
South
Pole
Path of the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter on Sept. 17, 2019
Curtius
Manzinus
Moretus
Vikram
lander
Path of the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter on Sept. 17, 2019
South
Pole
NASA’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter flew over the area ten days later, but the sun was low in the sky and long shadows may have hidden Vikram from view. NASA was unable to locate the spacecraft in the processed image.
Months later, the lander was finally located, and NASA released images showing where Vikram crashed into the moon.
Vikram’s impact site
100 METERS
Vikram’s impact site
100 METERS
Vikram’s impact site
100 METERS
Vikram’s
impact site
100 METERS
The First Moon Crash
The first spacecraft designed to hit the moon was the Soviet Union’s Lunik, or Luna 1. It launched in early 1959 and missed the moon, but was still a propaganda victory for Moscow. It’s still out there somewhere, orbiting the sun between the Earth and Mars.
Eight months later, Luna 2 smashed into the moon and became “the first object sent by man from one cosmic body to another,” as described in the Times.
Lunar Hard Landings
Seven countries or organizations have made hard landings on the moon: the ◼ Soviet Union, ◼ United States, ◼ Japan, ◼ European Space Agency, ◼ India, ◼ China and ◼ Israel.
Some crashes were setbacks and others were intentional, or made at the end of a successful mission. But whatever the cause, space agencies have learned a great deal from each collision.
Some types of crashes (rocket engines, Apollo lunar modules) are not shown on the map, and some crash locations are unknown.
Apollo Impacts
Months before Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin first set foot on the moon, the Apollo 10 dress rehearsal dropped half of the lunar module “Snoopy” to crash into the moon.
The famous “Eagle” lunar module from Apollo 11 fell back to the moon a few months after the astronauts returned to Earth. Later Apollo missions used the impacts from spent rockets and abandoned lunar modules to test seismic experiments placed on the moon.
Crashing Into Mars
The moon is not the only world littered with the remains of crushed spacecraft. Landing on Mars is one of the most challenging tasks faced by spacecraft designers.
The first spacecraft to touch the red planet was the Soviet Union’s Mars 2, which crashed during a landing attempt in 1971.
In 1999, NASA’s Mars Climate Orbiter was lost and may have burned up in the Martian atmosphere after an embarrassing mixup between English and metric units of thrust. Later that year, the Mars Polar Lander smashed into Mars after its engine cut off early.
One intentional crash was the sky crane that successfully lowered the Curiosity rover to the Martian surface in 2012. Its impact left a dark patch that was visible from orbit.
More recently, the European-Russian Schiaparelli lander crashed during descent in 2016, leaving a dark splotch on a smooth Martian plain.
Into the Clouds of Venus
Three space agencies have made hard landings on Venus.
The Soviet Union sent many missions to Venus in the 1960s, 70s and 80s, and its Venera 3 spacecraft made the first crash landing on another planet in 1966.
The United States sent four probes to crash onto the planet’s surface in 1978, and NASA’s Magellan spacecraft burned into the thick Venusian atmosphere in 1994.
Twenty years later, the European Space Agency sent their Venus Express spacecraft into the planet’s atmosphere at the end of a successful mission.
Hitting Mercury
Elsewhere in the solar system, NASA’s Messenger spacecraft ran out of fuel and crashed into Mercury in 2015.
North
Pole
Messenger’s
first orbit in
2011
Final orbit
April 2015
2013
2012
North
Pole
Messenger’s
first orbit in
2011
Final orbit
April 2015
2013
2012
Messenger’s
first orbit in
2011
North
Pole
Final orbit
April 2015
2013
2012
Messenger’s last image before impact showed a patch of the surface near Mercury’s north pole.
Touching an Asteroid
NASA’s NEAR Shoemaker spacecraft became the first craft to land on an asteroid when it survived an improvised landing on asteroid 433 Eros in 2001.
Its final image of Eros was interrupted when the spacecraft made contact with the surface.
Two Comets
In 2005, NASA’s Deep Impact spacecraft made a more dramatic crash when it intentionally slammed into a comet.
A camera on the impactor captured the final moments before impact.
More recently, the European Space Agency’s Rosetta spacecraft released its Philae lander to touch down on comet 67P in 2014.
Area of
detail below
Area of
detail below
Area of
detail below
Area of
detail below
Philae bounced across the surface and was lost for two years before it was finally found wedged in a dark crevice.
Several weeks after Philae was found, Rosetta ended its mission and slowly belly-flopped onto the comet. Its final image before impact showed a fuzzy patch of the surface about 3 feet wide.
The Outer Solar System
At least three spacecraft have burned up in the planets of the outer solar system.
NASA’s Galileo spacecraft released a probe to burn into Jupiter’s atmosphere in 1995, and Galileo later disintegrated itself in 2003.
The Cassini spacecraft flew into Saturn in 2017 after returning more than a decade of images from the ringed planet.
Map data from NASA and the U.S. Geological Survey's Astrogeology Science Center.