Mare Imbrium is visible to the
naked eye from Earth. In the traditional '
Man in the Moon' image seen on the Moon in Western folklore, Mare Imbrium forms the man's right eye.
Luna 17 On 17 November 1970 at 03:47 Universal Time, the Soviet spacecraft
Luna 17 made a soft landing in the mare, at latitude 38.28 N, and longitude 35.00 W. Luna 17 carried
Lunokhod 1, the first robotic
rover to be deployed on the Moon or any extraterrestrial body. Lunokhod 1, a remote-controlled rover, was successfully deployed and undertook a mission lasting several months.
Apollo 15 In 1971, the crewed
Apollo 15 mission landed in the southeastern region of Mare Imbrium, between
Hadley Rille and the
Apennine Mountains. Commander
David Scott and Lunar Module Pilot
James Irwin spent three days on the surface of the Moon, including 18½ hours outside the spacecraft on lunar
extra-vehicular activity. Command Module Pilot
Alfred Worden remained in orbit and acquired hundreds of high-resolution photographs of Mare Imbrium (and other regions of the Moon) as well as other types of scientific data. The crew on the surface explored the area using the first
lunar rover and
returned to Earth with of lunar surface material. Samples were collected from
Mons Hadley Delta, believed to be a fault block of pre-Imbrian (
Nectarian or
Pre-Nectarian) lunar crust, including the "
Genesis Rock." This was also the only Apollo mission to visit a lunar rille, and to observe outcrops of lunar bedrock visible in the rille wall.
2013 Impact On 17 March 2013, an object hit the lunar surface in Mare Imbrium and exploded in a flash of
apparent magnitude 4. The resulting crater was 18 meters wide. This was the brightest impact recorded since NASA's lunar impact team began monitoring in 2005.
Chinese landing was
Sinus Iridum. The actual landing took place on Mare Imbrium Chang'e 3 landed on 14 December 2013 on Mare Imbrium, about 40 km south of the 6 km diameter
Laplace F crater, at 44.1260°N 19.5014°W. The lander deployed the
Yutu rover 7 hours and 24 minutes later. The Chang'e 3 mission attempted to perform the first direct measurement of the structure and depth of the
lunar soil down to a depth of , and investigate the
lunar crust structure down to several hundred meters deep. The rover's ground penetrating radar found evidence of at least nine distinct
rock layers, indicating that the area had surprisingly complex geological processes and is compositionally distinct from the Apollo and Luna landing sites. ==See also==